Oklahoma State Highway 63

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State Highway 63 marker

State Highway 63
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Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length: 96.7 mi (155.6 km)
Existed: November 6, 1935[1] – present
Major junctions
West end: US 69.svg US-69 in Kiowa
East end: Arkansas 8.svg AR-8 at the Arkansas state line
Highway system
US-62 US-64

State Highway 63 (abbreviated SH-63) is a 96.7 mile (155.6 km)[2] state highway in southeastern Oklahoma. It runs from U.S. Highway 69 in Kiowa to the Arkansas state line. SH-1 forms a concurrency with SH-63 for 37.8 miles (60.8 km), nearly forty percent of the highway's length.[2] SH-63 has one spur route, designated as SH-63A.

SH-63 was added to the state highway system on November 6, 1935 as a short link highway between Talihina and SH-2. The highway was gradually extended to its present length between then and 1960. When the current incarnation of SH-1 was established, the middle of SH-63 was turned over to the new highway, leaving SH-63 in two separate parts. The two sections were connected via a concurrency in the early 1980s.

Route description

SH-63 heads northeast from Kiowa, passing through Pittsburg and crossing under the Indian Nation Turnpike near Blanco. In Haileyville, it meets US-270/SH-1 and begins a concurrency with them. After passing through Hartshorne, US-270 splits off. Seven miles (11 km) later, the highways pass through unincorporated Higgins, then continues east for 9 miles (14 km), where they meets State Highway 2 and the two highways concur with it.[3]

The SH-1/2/63 concurrency heads south for six miles (10 km).[3] West of Buffalo Valley, SH-2 splits off to the south as SH-1/63 head east. In Talihina, the highways meet US-271, which SH-1 joins. SH-63 heads east alone, passing through Whitesboro and Muse. In Big Cedar, it crosses U.S. Highway 259. It then enters Ouachita National Forest and ends at the state line. Arkansas Highway 8 continues on to Mena.

History

State Highway 63 was first established on November 6, 1935 as a connection between SH-2 and US-271 in Talihina.[1] On April 1, 1936, the highway was extended east to end at the Arkansas state line.[1][4] This remained the highway's extent for the remainder of the 1930s and the 1940s.

The highway was extended west for the first time on August 4, 1952, when SH-63's western terminus was set at US-270 near Hartshorne.[1] The highway was extended further west on January 29, 1960, bringing it to US-69 in Kiowa.[1] The SH-63 of 1960 had the same basic route as that of the present day.[5] Minor realignments to the highway occurred on September 6, 1962 northwest of the northern SH-2 junction, and through Haileyville and Hartshorne on August 3, 1964.[1]

The current State Highway 1 was designated on February 5, 1968.[1] The portion of highway between Haileyville and Talihina was made solely part of SH-1. This left SH-63 in two discontinuous sections, one between Kiowa and Haileyville and one from Talihina to the Arkansas line.[6] This situation would persist for fifteen years. On July 7, 1983, SH-63 was restored between the two segments, forming the SH-1/63 concurrency.[1] No further changes have occurred to the highway since.

Junction list

County Location mi[2] km Destinations Notes
Pittsburg Kiowa 0.0 0.0 US-69 Western terminus
Haileyville 21.9 35.2 US-270 / SH-1 Western terminus of US-270/SH-1 concurrency
Hartshorne 24.6 39.6 US-270 Eastern terminus of US-270 concurrency
Latimer 39.9 64.2 SH-2 Northern terminus of SH-2 concurrency
46.0 74.0 SH-2 Southern terminus of SH-2 concurrency
57.9 93.2 SH-63A Southern terminus of SH-63A
Le Flore Talihina 59.2 95.3 SH-82 Southern terminus of SH-82
59.7 96.1 SH-1 Eastern terminus of SH-1 concurrency
Big Cedar 85.4 137.4 US-271
96.7 155.6 AR 8 Eastern terminus, Arkansas state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

SH-63A

SH-63 has one lettered spur, SH-63A. SH-63A begins at SH-1/63 two miles (3 km) west of Talihina. It heads north for Lua error in Module:Convert at line 452: attempt to index field 'titles' (a nil value). before forking into two separate highways. The west fork goes to the Choctaw Nation hospital, while the east fork goes to the Oklahoma Veterans Center.[7] The west fork is exactly 1.00 mile (1.61 km) long, and the southern and eastern forks together are 1.40 miles (2.25 km), for a total combined length of 2.40 miles (3.86 km).[8]

References

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