U.S. Route 69 in Kansas
U.S. Route 69 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by KDOT | ||||
Length: | 163 mi (262 km) | |||
Existed: | 1935 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | US-69 at Oklahoma-Kansas state line | |||
North end: | US 69 at Kansas-Missouri state line | |||
Highway system | ||||
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U.S. Route 69 (or US-69) is a major north-south U.S. Highway that runs from Port Arthur, Texas to Albert Lea, Minnesota. In Kansas, the highway runs in the far eastern part of the state, usually within 5 miles of the Missouri state line. Most of the highway north of Fort Scott runs as a freeway.
Route description
US-69 enters Kansas just north of Miami, Oklahoma. The highway crosses US-166 just north of Treece before beginning an overlap US-160 in Columbus. US-400 joins the overlap in Crestline, before the two highways leave near Pittsburg. US-69 travels north to Fort Scott and runs as a freeway. The freeway designation ends in Linn County, before resuming again a few miles north of Pleasanton. The highway runs through more rural areas before entering Overland Park.
In Overland Park, US-69 interchanges with Interstate 435/US-50/US-169 before beginning an overlap with I-35/US-56 in Lenexa. US-69 and US-56 leave I-35 in Merriam, traveling back into Overland Park. US-56 leaves the highway, running into KCM. US-69 rejoins I-35 again at an interchange with I-635. US-69 leaves I-35 again and runs along the 18th Street Expressway to I-70/US-40 in KCK. US-69 joins I-70/US-40 and leaves again at an interchange with I-670/US-169. US-69 enters Missouri just past the intersection with K-5, crossing the Missouri River.
History
18th Street Expressway
The 18th Street Expressway was the result of one of four feasibility studies conducted by the Kansas Turnpike Authority to extend the turnpike by providing easy access to northeast Johnson County. It was the only one of the four studies to be followed upon, with completion of the 18th Street Expressway Bridge over the Kansas River completed in 1959.[1] It replaced the Argentine Boulevard bridge over the river behind the modern-day BNSF railroad yard.
Originally, the highway was part of the original K-58.[2] Upon completion of the bridge, US-69 was rerouted onto the expressway from Southwest Boulevard (the section of which has since been renamed to Merriam Drive). In 1979, the K-58 designation was removed.
The section of 18th Street between I-70 and the southern end of the Kansas River bridge was tolled at least as late as 1984.[3]
Junction list
County | Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes |
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Cherokee | Lyon–Spring Valley township line | US-69 south – Miami | Continuation into Oklahoma | ||
US-166 – Chetopa, Baxter Springs | |||||
Columbus | US-160 west / K-7 north – Oswego, Girard | Southern end of US 160 overlap | |||
Shawnee Township | US-400 east / US-69 Alt. south – Joplin, Miami | Southern end of US 400 overlap | |||
Pleasant View Township | K-103 west – Weir | ||||
Cherokee–Crawford county line | Pleasant View–Baker township line | US-400 west / K-171 east – Parsons, Joplin | Northern end of US 400 overlap | ||
Crawford | Pittsburg | US-69 Bus. north – Pittsburg | |||
K-126 – McCune, Pittsburg | |||||
US-69 Bus. south – Pittsburg | |||||
US-160 east – Lamar | Northern end of US 160 overlap | ||||
Washington Township | K-47 west – Girard | ||||
US-69 Bus. north – Franklin | |||||
US-69 Bus. south – Arma | |||||
Bourbon | Scott Township | K-7 south – Girard | Interchange; southern end of K-7 overlap | ||
Fort Scott | US-54 east – Nevada | Southern end of freeway; southern end of US 54 overlap | |||
Scott Township | US-54 west / K-7 north – Iola, Harding | Northern end of US 54/K-7 overlap | |||
Poplar Road | |||||
Osage Township | Soldier Road | ||||
K-31 – Harding | |||||
Linn | Sheridan Township | K-239 – Prescott | |||
Potosi Township | K-52 west – Mound City | Southern end of K-52 overlap | |||
Pleasanton | 6th Street/E. 1100th Road | ||||
Potosi Township | E. 1350 Road | ||||
Valley Township | K-52 east – Butler | Northern end of K-52 overlap | |||
Lincoln Township | K-152 – La Cygne | ||||
Miami | Sugar Creek Township | W. 399th Street | |||
W. 359th Street | |||||
Sugar Creek–Middle Creek township line | W. 335th Street | ||||
Middle Creek Township | W. 311th Street | ||||
Louisburg | K-68 – Ottawa, Louisburg | ||||
Wea Township | W. 247th Street | ||||
W. 223rd Street | |||||
Johnson | Overland Park | 199th Street | |||
179th Street | |||||
167th Street | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
151st Street | |||||
135th Street | |||||
Blue Valley Parkway | Northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
119th Street | |||||
College Boulevard | |||||
I-435 / US-50 / US-169 – Wichita, Int'l Airport, Independence | I-435 exit 81 | ||||
103rd Street | |||||
95th Street | |||||
Lenexa | 87th Street | No northbound entrance | |||
I-35 north / US-56 east | Southern end of I-35/US 56/US 169 overlap; northbound exit and southbound entrance | ||||
Overland Park–Merriam city line | 75th Street | ||||
Merriam | 67th Street | ||||
I-35 north | Northern end of I-35 overlap/freeway | ||||
Overland Park–Mission city line | US-56 east – KCM | Interchange; northern end of US 56 overlap | |||
Johnson Drive | Interchange; southbound exit and entrance | ||||
I-35 south / I-635 north – Wichita, Kansas City | Southern end of I-35 overlap/freeway; I-35 exits 231A-B; I-635 exit 1A | ||||
Wyandotte | Kansas City | 24th Street | |||
I-35 north – KCM | Northern end of I-35 overlap | ||||
Merriam Road | Southbound exit and northbound entrance | ||||
Steele Road/Springhorn Lane | |||||
Ruby Avenue | |||||
K-32 (Kansas Avenue) | |||||
I-70 west to Kansas Turnpike – Lawrence, Topeka | Southern end of I-70 overlap | ||||
I-70 east / I-670 east / US-169 – Downtown Kansas City, St. Louis | Northern end of I-70 overlap/freeway | ||||
K-5 west (Sunshine Road) | |||||
Missouri River | Platte Purchase Bridge; Kansas–Missouri state line | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
- ↑ Lamb, Sherry; Dr. Theodore A. Wilson (December 1986). Milestones: A History of the Kansas Highway Commission and the Department of Transportation. Kansas Department of Transportation. pp. 4–19 to 4–20.
- ↑ Kansas (Map) (1974 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha. Texaco. Kansas City inset.
- ↑ Road Atlas and Travel Guide (Map). Rand McNally. 1984. p. 71. Kansas City inset.
External links
U.S. Route 69 | ||
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Previous state: Oklahoma |
Kansas | Next state: Missouri |