Oklahoma State Highway 67

Oklahoma State Highway 67

State Highway 67 marker

State Highway 67
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length: 9.94 mi (16.00 km)
Existed: May 21, 1936[1] – present
Major junctions
West end: Alt plate.svg
US 75.svg US-75 ALT in Kiefer
East end: US 64.svg US-64 in Bixby
Highway system

Oklahoma State Highways
Oklahoma turnpike system

SH-66 US-69

State Highway 67, abbreviated as SH-67 or OK-67, is an 9.94-mile (16.00 km) long highway on the south side of Tulsa. It begins in the west at U.S. Route 75 Alternate in Kiefer and runs east along 151st St. South before ending at US-64 in Bixby. Along the way it crosses US-75 in Glenpool. It has no lettered spur routes.

SH-67 was first established in 1936. Throughout much of its early years, the highway's extent was in flux, at various times serving towns such as Mounds, Drumright, Sapulpa, and Coweta.

Contents

Route description

State Highway 67 is split between the counties of Creek and Tulsa County. The first 1.92 miles (3.09 km) of the route lie in Creek County,[2] while the remainder of the route, 8.02 miles (12.91 km), falls within Tulsa County.[3]

SH-67 begins at US-75 ALT in downtown Kiefer. The highway heads east from here, crossing into Tulsa County just under two miles east of town. About a mile after crossing the county line, SH-67 has an interchange with US-75, the Okmulgee Bee-Line.[4] The route then proceeds east to Memorial Drive (US-64 in Bixby), where it reaches its eastern terminus.

History

SH-67 was first commissioned on May 21, 1936, serving the in same capacity—connecting US 75 to US 64 south of Tulsa—as it does now, though with a much different route.[1] The original SH-67 began at US-75 in Mounds (US-75 at the time using the present-day route of US-75 ALT) and continuing east through far southern Tulsa County, reaching US-64 south of Bixby.[5] The first extension to SH-67 occurred just over one month into the highway's life, on June 23, 1936.[1] This extended the designation north along US-75 to Sapulpa. From here, it ran concurrent with US-66 out of town, splitting from US-66 to follow present-day SH-33 (which at this time followed SH-51 en route to downtown Tulsa) and coming to an end in Drumright.[5]

The original part of SH-67, from Mounds to Bixby, was removed from the highway on December 31, 1937.[1][6] SH-67 was re-extended to Bixby on June 7, 1943, following a more northerly route, branching off from US-64 in Kiefer, similar to the present-day one (although the final realignment of this section was not established until 1971).[1][7]

The western part of SH-67, from Drumright to Sapulpa was truncated on May 8, 1951.[1][8] This, along with the realignment of August 9, 1971, brought about SH-67 as it exists today.[1]

The SH-67 designation was assigned to another segment of highway east of the present-day route. On October 15, 1956, a section of gravel road beginning at the Tulsa–Wagoner County line and extending into Coweta was added to the highway system as SH-67.[1][9] This segment of highway was decommissioned on November 10, 1969.[1]

Junction list

County Location Mile[10] Destinations Notes
Creek
Kiefer 0.0 Alt plate.svg
US 75.svg US-75 ALT
Western terminus
Tulsa
Glenpool 2.9 US-75 Interchange
Bixby 9.9 US-64 Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "Memorial Dedication and Revision History, SH 67". http://www.okladot.state.ok.us/memorial/legal/sh67.htm. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  2. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. 2008 Control Section Maps – Creek County (Map). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/control-maps/creek.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  3. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation. 2008 Control Section Maps – Tulsa County (Map). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/control-maps/tulsa.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  4. ^ DeLorme (2006). Oklahoma Atlas and Gazetteer (Map). 1:200,000. 
  5. ^ a b Oklahoma Department of Highways. Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (Map) (April 1937 ed.). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/state-maps/pdfs/1937.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  6. ^ Oklahoma Department of Highways. Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (Map) (April 1938 ed.). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/state-maps/pdfs/1938.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  7. ^ Oklahoma Department of Highways. Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (Map) (June 1944 ed.). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/state-maps/pdfs/1944.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  8. ^ Oklahoma Department of Highways (1952). Map of Oklahoma's State Highway System (Map). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/state-maps/pdfs/1952.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  9. ^ Oklahoma Department of Highways. 1958 Oklahoma Road Map (Map). http://www.odot.org/hqdiv/p-r-div/maps/state-maps/pdfs/1958.pdf. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
  10. ^ Stuve, Eric. "OK-67". OKHighways. http://www.okhighways.com/ok67.html. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 

External links


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