Oklahoma State Highway 8

From the AARoads Wiki: Read about the road before you go
(Redirected from State Highway 8 (Oklahoma))
Jump to navigation Jump to search

State Highway 8

Map of OK 8; mainline in red, spur routes in blue
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length179.1 mi[1] (288.2 km)
ExistedAugust 24, 1924–present
Major junctions
South end US 277 / SH-19 in Cyril
Major intersections I-40 near Hinton
North end K-8 at the Kansas state line
Location
CountryUnited States
StateOklahoma
Highway system
  • Oklahoma State Highway System
SH-7 SH-9

State Highway 8, also abbreviated as SH-8 or OK-8, is a highway maintained by the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Because it runs mainly north–south, it has an even number (which is normal for Oklahoma state highways, but opposite from national highways). Highway 8 runs from U.S. Highway 277 in Cyril, Oklahoma to the state line south of Kiowa, Kansas, for a total length of 179.1 miles (288.2 km)[1] The highway has two lettered spur routes.

Highway 8 dates from the creation of the state highway system in 1924. Initially a border-to-border route, it was shortened to its current extent due to encroaching U.S. highways. SH-8 has followed its current route since 1966.

Route description

US-270, US-281, and SH-8 in Watonga, looking southbound.

The highway begins in Cyril, at US-277 (which at the time is concurrent with State Highway 19), and immediately heads northward. Fourteen miles (23 km) later, the highway passes through Anadarko, sharing a brief overlap with US-62/SH-9. It also becomes concurrent with US-281 here, which it remains with after passing through Anadarko.[2]

US-281 and SH-8 continue northward to meet SH-152, which they overlap for five miles (8.0 km). SH-152 splits off to the west at Binger, and US-281/SH-8 go northward through Lookeba to meet SH-37 at its western terminus in Hinton. Four miles (6.4 km) to the north, the two highways have an interchange with Interstate 40 at its milemarker 101. After this, US-281/SH-8 cross the Canadian River and begin a concurrency with U.S. Highway 270 in Geary. SH-8 splits off by itself after passing through Watonga, sixteen miles (26 km) to the north.[2]

North of Watonga, SH-8 generally runs parallel to SH-51A and, after intersecting SH-51 in Okeene, it runs parallel to SH-58. Eleven miles (18 km) north of Okeene, SH-58 and SH-8 switch places through a 9-mile (14 km) overlap, with SH-8 ending up running to the west through Fairview and SH-58 running to the east to Ringwood.[2]

After swapping places with SH-58, Highway 8 continues north, overlapping US-60 for nine miles (14 km), spending the last three miles (4.8 km) also signed concurrently with US-412.[2] Eleven miles (18 km) north of this, SH-8 has a three-mile (4.8 km) concurrency with SH-45 southeast of Carmen. Through Cherokee, the Alfalfa County seat, it overlaps U.S. Highway 64 and SH-58. After US-64 splits off to the west, SH-11 joins the concurrency.[2]

After six miles (9.7 km), SH-58 splits off to the northeast. SH-11 and SH-8 remain overlapped for seven more miles (11.3 km)[2] before splitting off to the north. SH-8 ends seven miles (11 km) to the north of this at the Kansas state line.[2] After crossing the state line, it becomes K-8, which soon ends at K-2 in Kiowa, Kansas.[3]

History

SH-8 was one of the original thirty-one state highways created on August 24, 1924.[4] When it was created, it was a border-to-border highway, stretching from Texas to Kansas. It began at the Red River near Burkburnett, Texas. It then passed through Randlett and had a short concurrency with SH-5 west of Walters. The highway then ran through Lawton—concurring with the original SH-29—en route to Anadarko via Apache. In Anadarko, SH-8 linked up with the present highway. The remainder of the route was mostly the same as it is today.[5]

In November 1926, AASHTO officially approved the United States Numbered Highways system. The Oklahoma Transportation Commission applied the national highways to Oklahoma's state highway system on November 26, 1926. Three U.S. highways were assigned to portions of what was then SH-8: U.S. Highway 64 was added to a segment of highway south of Cherokee, U.S. Highway 66 was added between Bridgeport and Geary, and U.S. Highway 70 was added from the Texas state line to Randlett.[4] US-66 and 64 merely ran concurrently with SH-8. However, US-70 completely replaced the state highway, which was truncated so that its southern terminus was at US-70 in Randlett.[6]

By 1936, several U.S. highways had been added to the system that took over parts of State Highway 8's route. US-62, added in 1930, took over the Lawton–Anadarko portion of the road. US-277 took over much of the remaining route between Randlett and Lawton. In addition, a US-70N had been created that overlaid US-277 between Randlett and the split with SH-5 west of Walters.[7] These changes to the U.S. route system precipitated the truncation of SH-8 in 1936. On 1936-03-13, the section of the route between Anadarko and the state line was dropped. However, a new road between Anadarko and Cyril had been built; this became part of SH-8 and set the highway's southern terminus at its present location.[4]

By the end of 1937, however, the highway's southern terminus had changed once again. On October 19, 1937, SH-8 was truncated to Anadarko.[4][8] However, on 1938-10-18, the route was extended back to the former southern terminus at Randlett;[4] this change did not appear on the state map until the April 1941 edition. On April 14, 1941, the route was realigned to run through Cyril once again.[4]

On September 12, 1955, SH-8 underwent a small realignment.[4] Previously, the highway went due north from Carmen, then turned due east, running through Lambert before connecting to US-64 south of Cherokee.[9] As a result of the 1955 realignment, SH-8 cut northeast to connect to US-64 directly, bypassing Lambert.[10]

All of SH-8 between Randlett and Cyril was once again dropped on May 9, 1966,[4] restoring the route to its current southern terminus at US-277/SH-19 in Cyril. No major changes to the highway have occurred since 1966.

Spurs

  • SH-8A runs from SH-8 to SH-51A, north of Watonga. Along the way, it provides access to Roman Nose State Park.
  • A former SH-8A connected the highway to the town of Geronimo. When SH-8 was truncated to Cyril in 1966, it became SH-281A.
  • SH-8B is a spur route from SH-8 to Aline.

Junction list

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
CaddoCyril0.00.0 US 277 / SH-19Southern terminus
Anadarko13.121.1 US 62 / SH-9Eastern end of US-62/SH-9 concurrency
13.722.0 US 62 / US 281 / SH-9Western end of US-62/SH-9 concurrency, southern end of US-281 concurrency
29.347.2 SH-152Eastern end of SH-152 concurrency
Binger33.954.6 SH-152Western end of SH-152 concurrency
Hinton46.174.2 SH-37Western terminus of SH-37
50.280.8 I-40Diamond interchange
Canadian55.188.7US 281 Spur.svg US-281 SpurNorthern terminus of US-281 Spur
BlaineGeary59.295.3 US 270Southern end of US-270 concurrency
Watonga76.1122.5 US 270 / US 281 / SH-3 / SH-33Northern end of US-270/US-281 concurrency
79.8128.4 SH-51ASouthern terminus of SH-51A
80.3129.2 SH-8ASouthern terminus of SH-8A
Okeene99.4160.0 SH-51
Major110.4177.7 SH-58Eastern end of SH-58 concurrency
Fairview119.4192.2 US 60 / SH-58Western end of SH-58 concurrency, southern end of US-60 concurrency
Orienta125.4201.8 US 412Western end of US-412 concurrency
Cleo Springs119.4192.2 US 60 / US 412Northern end of US-60 concurrency, eastern end of US-412 concurrency
Alfalfa136.7220.0 SH-8BEastern terminus of SH-8B
138.7223.2 SH-45Southern end of SH-45 concurrency
141.7228.0 SH-45Northern end of SH-45 concurrency
149.0239.8 US 64 / SH-58Southern end of US-64/SH-58 concurrency
158.2254.6 US 64 / SH-11Northern end of US-64 concurrency, southern end of SH-11 concurrency
Driftwood165.2265.9 SH-58Northern end of SH-58 concurrency
172.2277.1 SH-11Northern end of SH-11 concurrency
Oklahoma–Kansas state line179.1288.2 K-8 continues north into Kansas
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Google (2012-09-18). "Oklahoma State Highway 8" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2012-09-18.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Official State Highway Map (Map) (2008 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  3. ^ Official State Transportation Map (PDF) (Map) (2013–2014 ed.). Kansas Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Oklahoma Department of Transportation, Planning & Research Division. "Memorial Dedication & Revision History - SH-8". Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  5. ^ Oklahoma State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (1925 ed.). Oklahoma State Highway Department. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  6. ^ Oklahoma State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (1927 ed.). Oklahoma State Highway Department. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  7. ^ Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (April 1937 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Highways. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  8. ^ Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (April 1938 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Highways. Retrieved 2008-05-23.
  9. ^ Highways of Oklahoma (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma Department of Highways. 1954. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
  10. ^ Oklahoma's Highways 1956 (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma Department of Highways. Retrieved 2008-05-24.

External links