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Spur 126 was designated on September 23, 1941, from US 87 (later Loop 378, now FM 1223) south of San Angelo to a connection with Avenue K in San Angelo. On March 29, 1988, a 0.1-mile (0.16 km) section from FM 388 north to Avenue K was removed from the highway system and returned to the city of San Angelo.
State Highway 136 (SH 136) is a Texas state highway that runs from the Oklahoma state line south of Guymon, Oklahoma to Amarillo. The route was designated on January 23, 1929 from Amarillo to Oklahoma. [2] [3] On March 19, 1930, the route was truncated to Stinnett, with the portion north of Stinnett transferred to SH 117. On February 4, 1941 ...
List of state highway spurs in Texas (1–99) List of state highway spurs in Texas (100–199) List of state highway spurs in Texas (200–299) List of state highway spurs in Texas (300–399) List of state highway spurs in Texas (400–499) List of state highway spurs in Texas (500–9999)
Break Time is a chain of convenience stores and gas stations owned and operated by MFA Oil. [3] It is also headquartered in Columbia; and operates 74 stores across the state. [4] All Break Time locations sell MFA Oil gasoline [5] and BOSS diesel fuel. [6] Nearly half a dozen Break Time locations have a car wash. The convenience store offers a ...
initially 70 to Spur, but was moved to Loop 21 in 1942; later FM 836 Spur, now FM 2794 (part) Loop 111: 1960 now originally IH 35 to US 290 northeast of Austin, but this became US 183 (part) in 1966 Spur 112: 1965 now Spur 112: 1940 1949 → FM 1347 Spur 113: 1940 1948 → FM 541 Loop 113: 1980 1990 → 281 Bus. Spur 113: 1993 now Spur 114: 1940
Cushing is the delivery point for West Texas Intermediate, a blend of US light sweet crude oil streams [1] traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange [19]. Cushing's strategic position as a major hub in oil supply led to WTI's development as a significant physical market price reference or benchmark for over three decades.
FM 1 was designated on April 23, 1941, and was the first Farm to Market Road to be so designated in Texas. Connecting a sawmill owned by Temple Lumber Company to US 96 and obviating the need to use the Pendelton Ferry, [3] it had been designated shortly after being upgraded from a dirt road to a paved road at the request of Temple and two gas companies. [4]
The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT / ˈ t ɛ k s. d ɒ t /) is a Texas state government agency responsible for construction and maintenance of the state's immense state highway system and the support of the state's maritime, aviation, rail, and public transportation systems.