U.S. ROUTE 377
(Redirected from U.S. Highway 377)
'U.S. Route 377' is a north-south United States highway. Originally created as a short spur to connect Denton, Texas with Fort Worth, Texas, it has since been extended to Oklahoma and Mexico for a total length of 478 miles[1] (768 km).
The southern terminus is in Del Rio, Texas at an intersection with U.S. Highway 90. It goes north of town co-signed with U.S. Route 277 for 20 miles (32 km). After splitting off, it enters Edwards County and Carta Valley. It meets SH-55 at the county seat, Rocksprings, before serving as the western terminus of SH 41. It heads northeast into Kimble County, crossing the county line near Telegraph. At Junction, Texas, it meets both Interstate 10 and U.S. 83. It then continues northeast through London, extreme southeastern Menard County, and Mason County. In Mason County, U.S. 377 passes through Streeter before forming a concurrency with SH 29 near Grit. In Mason, SH 29 splits off to its own alignment while U.S. 377 turns north to join U.S. Route 87.
U.S. 87/377 head north together into Brady, where they meet U.S. 190, the southern terminus of U.S. 283, and SH 71. U.S. 377 splits off to the north and heads to Mercury and crosses the Colorado River near Winchell. In Brownwood, U.S. 377 joins with U.S. Route 67, following its routing all the way to Stephenville, where U.S. 377 splits off on its own again. U.S. 377 then enters Hood County, where it passes through the county seat, Granbury. It cuts the corners of both Johnson County and Parker County before entering Tarrant County and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.
U.S. 377 crosses Interstate 20 at exit 429A in Benbrook. It then enters Fort Worth proper, meeting SH 183 and Spur 580. It runs northeast on Camp Bowie Blvd. to Interstate 30, which it begins a concurrency with. At the Interstate 35W junction, it heads north along that highway before splitting off at Exit 52A (Belknap St.). It heads due north at the Denton Highway and contines to run through many D/FW suburbs, including Haltom City, Watauga, Keller, Westlake, Roanoke, and Argyle. In Denton, it crosses Interstate 35E and has a brief concurrency with U.S. 380.
After splitting from U.S. 380, U.S. 377 runs east of Aubrey, through Pilot Point, Tioga, and Collinsville, before having an interchange with U.S. 82 at Whitesboro. It the heads north to cross Lake Texoma (the Red River) into Oklahoma.
U.S. 377 is co-signed with State Highway 99 for its entire Oklahoma length. U.S. 377's first junction within Oklahoma is with SH-32 west of Kingston. The first town that U.S. 377/SH-99 pass through is Madill, where the two highways meet U.S. 70 and State Highway 199. The next town after that is Tishomingo, where there is a brief concurrency with SH-22. U.S. 399/SH-99 run north from Tishomingo, having a one-mile (1.6 km) three-route concurrency with SH-7 before meeting State Highway 3 southeast of Ada. U.S. 377/SH-99 run around the east and north sides of town. On the north side of Ada, SH-3E joins the concurrency.
After leaving Ada, U.S. 377/SH-3E/99 pass through Byng. The three highways cross the Canadian River just south of a junction that serves as the eastern terminus of SH-39 and the western terminus of SH-56. North of Bowlegs, SH-59 joins with the other routes briefly. The next major town is Seminole, where the highways meet SH-9, and SH-3E splits off. U.S. 377/SH-99 cross I-40 at Exit 200. The highways have a junction with U.S. 62 in Prague.
As of 2007, the highway's northern terminus is in Stroud, Oklahoma at an indeterminate point somewhere between old Route 66 (now Oklahoma State Highway 66) and modern Interstate 44. As of 2006, the highway's northern terminus is in Stroud, Oklahoma at an indeterminate point somewhere between old Route 66 and modern Interstate 44. OK-99 continues north into Kansas.
When US 377 was commissioned in 1930, US 77 connected Dallas, Texas with the north and south, but nearby Fort Worth lacked a direct northern connection. US 377 connected US 77 in Denton, Texas with US 81 in Fort Worth, Texas, creating a parallel route between Denton and Hillsboro, Texas, where US 81 met US 77. When the Interstate highway system was built, Interstate 35 paralleled the Dallas/Fort Worth split with routes I-35E through Dallas (along US 77) and I-35W through Fort Worth (along US 377 and US 81).
★ U.S. Highway 77
★ U.S. Highway 177
★ U.S. Highway 277
★ Endpoints of US highways
★ Oklahoma Terminus: US 377
1. Droz, Robert V. U.S. Highways : From US 1 to (US 830). URL accessed 5 October 2006 (UTC).
'U.S. Route 377' is a north-south United States highway. Originally created as a short spur to connect Denton, Texas with Fort Worth, Texas, it has since been extended to Oklahoma and Mexico for a total length of 478 miles[1] (768 km).
| Contents |
| Route description |
| Texas |
| Oklahoma |
| History |
| Related US Routes |
| Sources and external links |
| References |
Route description
Texas
The southern terminus is in Del Rio, Texas at an intersection with U.S. Highway 90. It goes north of town co-signed with U.S. Route 277 for 20 miles (32 km). After splitting off, it enters Edwards County and Carta Valley. It meets SH-55 at the county seat, Rocksprings, before serving as the western terminus of SH 41. It heads northeast into Kimble County, crossing the county line near Telegraph. At Junction, Texas, it meets both Interstate 10 and U.S. 83. It then continues northeast through London, extreme southeastern Menard County, and Mason County. In Mason County, U.S. 377 passes through Streeter before forming a concurrency with SH 29 near Grit. In Mason, SH 29 splits off to its own alignment while U.S. 377 turns north to join U.S. Route 87.
U.S. 87/377 head north together into Brady, where they meet U.S. 190, the southern terminus of U.S. 283, and SH 71. U.S. 377 splits off to the north and heads to Mercury and crosses the Colorado River near Winchell. In Brownwood, U.S. 377 joins with U.S. Route 67, following its routing all the way to Stephenville, where U.S. 377 splits off on its own again. U.S. 377 then enters Hood County, where it passes through the county seat, Granbury. It cuts the corners of both Johnson County and Parker County before entering Tarrant County and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.
U.S. 377 crosses Interstate 20 at exit 429A in Benbrook. It then enters Fort Worth proper, meeting SH 183 and Spur 580. It runs northeast on Camp Bowie Blvd. to Interstate 30, which it begins a concurrency with. At the Interstate 35W junction, it heads north along that highway before splitting off at Exit 52A (Belknap St.). It heads due north at the Denton Highway and contines to run through many D/FW suburbs, including Haltom City, Watauga, Keller, Westlake, Roanoke, and Argyle. In Denton, it crosses Interstate 35E and has a brief concurrency with U.S. 380.
After splitting from U.S. 380, U.S. 377 runs east of Aubrey, through Pilot Point, Tioga, and Collinsville, before having an interchange with U.S. 82 at Whitesboro. It the heads north to cross Lake Texoma (the Red River) into Oklahoma.
Oklahoma
U.S. 377 is co-signed with State Highway 99 for its entire Oklahoma length. U.S. 377's first junction within Oklahoma is with SH-32 west of Kingston. The first town that U.S. 377/SH-99 pass through is Madill, where the two highways meet U.S. 70 and State Highway 199. The next town after that is Tishomingo, where there is a brief concurrency with SH-22. U.S. 399/SH-99 run north from Tishomingo, having a one-mile (1.6 km) three-route concurrency with SH-7 before meeting State Highway 3 southeast of Ada. U.S. 377/SH-99 run around the east and north sides of town. On the north side of Ada, SH-3E joins the concurrency.
After leaving Ada, U.S. 377/SH-3E/99 pass through Byng. The three highways cross the Canadian River just south of a junction that serves as the eastern terminus of SH-39 and the western terminus of SH-56. North of Bowlegs, SH-59 joins with the other routes briefly. The next major town is Seminole, where the highways meet SH-9, and SH-3E splits off. U.S. 377/SH-99 cross I-40 at Exit 200. The highways have a junction with U.S. 62 in Prague.
As of 2007, the highway's northern terminus is in Stroud, Oklahoma at an indeterminate point somewhere between old Route 66 (now Oklahoma State Highway 66) and modern Interstate 44. As of 2006, the highway's northern terminus is in Stroud, Oklahoma at an indeterminate point somewhere between old Route 66 and modern Interstate 44. OK-99 continues north into Kansas.
History
When US 377 was commissioned in 1930, US 77 connected Dallas, Texas with the north and south, but nearby Fort Worth lacked a direct northern connection. US 377 connected US 77 in Denton, Texas with US 81 in Fort Worth, Texas, creating a parallel route between Denton and Hillsboro, Texas, where US 81 met US 77. When the Interstate highway system was built, Interstate 35 paralleled the Dallas/Fort Worth split with routes I-35E through Dallas (along US 77) and I-35W through Fort Worth (along US 377 and US 81).
Related US Routes
★ U.S. Highway 77
★ U.S. Highway 177
★ U.S. Highway 277
Sources and external links
★ Endpoints of US highways
★ Oklahoma Terminus: US 377
References
1. Droz, Robert V. U.S. Highways : From US 1 to (US 830). URL accessed 5 October 2006 (UTC).
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