Oklahoma State Highway 20

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State Highway 20 marker

State Highway 20
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Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length: 142.7 mi[1] (229.7 km)
Major junctions
West end: SH-18 near Ralston
East end: Route 43 at the Missouri state line (concurrent with AR 43)
Highway system
SH-19 SH-22

State Highway 20 (abbreviated SH-20) is a highway in northeastern Oklahoma. Its eastern terminus is at the corner of Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Missouri near Southwest City, Missouri; its western terminus is at State Highway 18 near Ralston. The highway runs a total length of 142.7 miles (229.7 km). It has no lettered spur routes.

Route description

File:End Missouri 43.jpg
Eastern terminus of State Highway 20 at Missouri Route 43

SH-20 begins just north of the Arkansas River at SH-18 near Ralston. From there, it heads east through Osage County for 20 miles (32 km) without crossing any other highway. At mile 20.4, it meets State Highway 99 in Hominy. East of Hominy, SH-20 crosses Lake Skiatook before passing through Skiatook and entering Tulsa County. Shortly after entering Tulsa County, SH-20 has a junction with SH-11. Four miles later, it has an interchange with US-75. After running through Collinsville, it turns southward onto the US-169 freeway.

SH-20 splits from US-169 north of Owasso. It then enters Claremore, where it meets SH-88 and SH-66 (old Route 66). It connects to the Claremore toll plaza on I-44/Will Rogers Turnpike. East of Claremore, SH-20 becomes a divided expressway before intersecting US-69 in Pryor. West of Salina, the highway bridges Lake Hudson. In Salina, SH-20 meets SH-82, with which it begins a concurrency.

Headed north from Salina, the two highways begin to cross some mountainous terrain. The highways provide access to Spavinaw State Park, before running through the town of Spavinaw, Oklahoma. North of Spavinaw, SH-20 splits off to the east, running through unincorporated Chloeta and serving as the eastern terminus of SH-28. SH-20 overlaps US-59/State Highway 10 through Jay. SH-20 then splits off to the east, running 11 miles (18 km) to the Arkansas line.

The easternmost miles run north/south along the Oklahoma–Arkansas state line, and along this stretch the highway overlaps Arkansas's Highway 43. The highway continues northward into Missouri at the point where the Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri borders meet, and thereafter becomes Missouri Route 43. This unique feature has led many roadgeeks to mention SH-20/AR-43 on their websites.

History

On April 10, 2008, a section of SH-20 in Rogers County near Keetonville, west of Claremore, was closed due to a landside caused by heavy rains.[2] A 500-foot (150 m) section of roadbed was washed away, forming a large crack in the pavement and damaging the guardrail.[3] The highway was re-opened June 5, 2008 after being repaired.

Junction list

County Location mi[1] km Destinations Notes
Osage Ralston 0.0 0.0 SH-18 Western terminus
Hominy 20.3 32.7 SH-99
Tulsa Skiatook 44.2 71.1 SH-11
48.2 77.6 US-75 Diamond interchange
Collinsville 53.7 86.4 US-169 Diamond interchange, northern terminus of US-169 concurrency
54.9 88.4 E. 136th Street N. Parclo interchange
55.7 89.6 E. 126th Street N. Diamond interchange
Owasso 56.7 91.2 US-169 Diamond interchange, southern terminus of US-169 concurrency
Rogers Claremore 68.6 110.4 SH-88
69.4 111.7 SH-66
69.5 111.8 SH-66 / SH-88
70.9 114.1 I‑44 / Will Rogers Turnpike
Mayes Pryor 86.3 138.9 US-69
Salina 96.0 154.5 SH-82 Southern terminus of SH-82 concurrency
Spavinaw 110.5 177.8 SH-82 Northern terminus of SH-82 concurrency
Delaware 119.5 192.3 SH-28 Eastern terminus of SH-28
Jay 124.0 199.6 US-59 / SH-10 Western terminus of US-59/SH-10 concurrency
125.7 202.3 SH-127 Southern terminus of SH-127
126.2 203.1 US-59 / SH-10 Eastern terminus of US-59/SH-10 concurrency
Oklahoma–Arkansas state line 137.2 220.8 AR 43 Southern terminus of AR 43 concurrency
Arkansas–Missouri state line 142.7 229.7 Route 43 continues north into Missouri
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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External links