U.S. ROUTE 16


'U.S. Route 16' is an east-west United States highway between Rapid City, South Dakota and Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.
As of 2004, the highway's eastern terminus is at a junction with Interstate 90, duplexed with I-190, outside of Rapid City, South Dakota. The western terminus is the east entrance to Yellowstone National Park.

Contents
Route description
Wyoming
South Dakota
History
Michigan
See also
Related U.S. Routes
Bannered and suffexed routes
References
External links

Route description


Major cities

Yellowstone Park
Cody, Wyoming
Worland, Wyoming
Buffalo, Wyoming
Gillette, Wyoming
Powell, Wyoming
Rapid City, South Dakota

Wyoming

Highway 16 in Wyoming crosses through the towns of Newcastle and Upton before joining Interstate 90 near Moorcraft. It runs concurrently with I-90 to Gillette, where it splits off north and then arcs back down to the town of Buffalo. From Buffalo it goes over the Powder River Pass on its way to Worland. In Worland, it turns north and is multiplexed with U.S. Route 20 through the towns of Basin and Greybull. In Greybull, the two routes combine with U.S. Route 14 and go east to Cody and into Yellowstone National Park. For most of the way it is a two-lane road.
South Dakota

From the Wye to Rapid City, US 16 is a divided, four-lane highway, with the two roadways separated by up to a half-mile in some places, including the old gold-mining town of Rockerville, South Dakota which is contained entirely between the two roadways.
The South Dakota section of U.S. 16 is defined at South Dakota Codified Laws § 31-4-138.[2]

History


Hwy 16 in Wyoming, westbound to Ten Sleep

US-16 route originally connected Detroit, Michigan with Yellowstone, including a ferry link across Lake Michigan between Muskegon, Michigan and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In Michigan, the route was in use long before automobiles and was known to white settlers as the 'Grand River Trail', and prior to the designation of U.S. routes, had been designated as M-16. In Michigan, most of US-16 became Interstate 96 and a segment of Grand River Avenue in Detroit ultimately became M-5. US-16 was later decommissioned in Wisconsin, Minnesota and eastern South Dakota to its present termini. Between Rapid City and Dexter, Minnesota, it has been supplanted by Interstate 90. In eastern Minnesota it is now Minnesota State Highway 16; in Wisconsin it is now Highway 16. In South Dakota it was replaced by various state highways (including SD Highway 38) and county roads: generally, in West River the old alignment was transferred to county responsibility entirely, while in East River it remained a state-maintained highway.
What remains of US 16 is a route that passes through the towns of Cody, Wyoming, Greybull, Wyoming, Worland, Wyoming, Buffalo, Wyoming, Gillette, Wyoming, Newcastle, Wyoming, and Custer, South Dakota and gives good access to Mount Rushmore. Between Buffalo and Rapid City, Interstate 90 is a much more direct (but not necessarily more scenic) route.
An "Alternate US 16" passes through Powell, Wyoming; an older Alternate US 16 in South Dakota has become South Dakota State Highway 240.
Michigan

M-16 was a state highway in the 1920s, running from Detroit to south of Muskegon. It became US-16 in 1926 when the U.S. Highway network began.
Much of US-16 in Michigan has been re-signed as Interstate 96 to avoid signage redundancy (or a long distance concurrency).

See also


Related U.S. Routes


★ ''U.S. Highway 116''

★ ''U.S. Highway 216''
Bannered and suffexed routes


★ ''U.S. Route 16 Alternate'' in Powell, Wyoming

US Highway 16A in South Dakota

References


1. US Highways from US 1 to US 830 Robert V. Droz
2. [1]

External links



US-16 endpoint photos

Historic US-16 in Michigan

Highways and Gas Stations- US Hwy 16 Page

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U.S. Route 16 Travel Deals