Arkansas Highway 13

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Highway 13 marker

Highway 13
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Route information
Maintained by AHTD
Existed: 1926 – present
Section 1
Length: 54.79 mi[1] (88.18 km)
South end: US 63 / US 79 near Humphrey
North end: Campground Road
Section 2
Length: 5.03 mi[1] (8.10 km)
South end: AR 367 in McRae
North end: AR 267
Section 3
Length: 5.91 mi[1] (9.51 km)
South end: AR 367 in Judsonia
North end: AR 258
Highway system
AR 12 AR 14

Highway 13 (AR 13, Ark. 13 and Hwy. 13) is a designation for three state highways in the central part of the U.S. state of Arkansas. The longest segment of 54.58 miles (87.84 km) travels from U.S. Route 79 (US 79) in Humphrey to Campground Road east of Beebe.[1][2] There exists two short segments in White County; one traveling 5.03 miles (8.10 km) from Highway 367 in McRae to Highway 267 and the other traveling 6.13 miles (9.87 km) from Highway 367 in Judsonia to Highway 258.[3]

The northern part of Highway 13 was replaced by Highway 81. Then, in 1989, when US 425 was commissioned, it replaced the entire route of Highway 13.

Route description

Beebe to Humphrey

Highway 13 starts east of Beebe and heads south to Highway 38 at Hickory Plains, and a crossing of both I-40 and US 70 in Carlisle. The route continues south to US 167 in Humnoke and to US 63/US 79 at Humphrey, where the route terminates.

McRae to Highway 267

The route begins in McRae at Highway 367 and runs north across US 64/US 67/US 167, which are concurrent. Highway 13 is Exit 35 on the converged highways. The route heads north to terminate at Highway 267 southwest of Searcy.

Judsonia to Highway 258

The route begins at Highway 367 near Friendly Acres Park and runs west as Missile Base Road. Highway 13 meets US 64/US 67/US 167 at a grade-separated interchange north of Judsonia. After this bridging, AR 13 turns north to intersect Highway 157 before terminating at Highway 258 near the Emmett Miller House.

History

Highway 13 was one of the original 1926 state highways. The route ran about 90 miles (140 km) from U.S. Route 65 south of Pine Bluff to the Louisiana state line, changing to Louisiana 139. The northern portion of the route was replaced by Highway 81, with the entire routing being replaced by U.S. Route 425 when it was commissioned in 1989.

Major intersections

County Location mi km Destinations Notes
Arkansas Humphrey 0.00 0.00 US 63 / US 79 – Stuttgart, Pine Bluff
Jefferson
No major junctions
Lonoke Humnoke 12.01 19.33 US 165 – England, Stuttgart
16.14 25.97 AR 232 west – Seaton
Carlisle 28.47 45.82 US 70 (West Park Street) – Lonoke, Hazen
29.88 48.09 I-40 – Little Rock, Memphis I-40 exit 183
30.04 48.34 AR 980 (Airport Road) – Airport
37.96 61.09 AR 236 west
Prairie Hickory Plains 44.89 72.24 AR 38 – Cabot, Des Arc
White 52.77 84.93 AR 267 north (Cypress Lake Road)
54.79 88.18 Campground Road
Gap in route
McRae 0.00 0.00 AR 367
1.01 1.63 US 64 / US 67 / US 167 – Beebe, Little Rock, Searcy, St. Louis US 67 exit 35
5.03 8.10 AR 267
Gap in route
Judsonia 0.00 0.00 AR 367
2.94 4.73 AR 157 – Plainview, Judsonia
5.91 9.51 AR 258
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

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