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Interstate 575 (I-575) is an auxiliary Interstate Highway in the United States, which branches off I-75 in Kennesaw and connects the Atlanta metropolitan area with the North Georgia mountains, extending 30.97 miles (49.84 km). I-575 is also the unsigned State Route 417 (SR 417) and is cosigned as SR 5.
US-75 enters Kansas from Oklahoma near Caney and almost immediately starts an overlap with US-166. The highways split about 4 miles north of the state line. South of Neodesha, US-75 overlaps with US-400 as a 2 lane freeway. At Interstate 35 (I-35), US-75 becomes a two-lane expressway again, passing east of Melvern Lake.
Missouri state line in Kansas City: 1956: current Concurrent with the Kansas Turnpike for 127 miles from the Oklahoma state line to the junction with I-335 and US-50 in Emporia. I-35W: 95.7: 154.0 I-35 / Kansas Turnpike in Wichita: I-70 / US-40 / US-81 in Salina: 1971: 1976 Renumbered I-135 I-66 — — Wichita, Kansas: Missouri State line
By Kansas law, no state highway may exist entirely within city limits. [1] As a result, some highways have been given to cities as they annex the land around them, as is the case with the eastern branch of K-150 in the Kansas City area, which is now entirely within Olathe and Overland Park. This part of K-150 is now known as Santa Fe in Olathe ...
Missouri state line in Kansas City: 1936: current US-36: 390: 630 Colorado state line west of St. Francis: Missouri state line in Elwood: 1926: current US-40: 423.67: 681.83 Colorado state line west of Weskan: Missouri state line in Kansas City: 1926: current US 40N — — — — 1926: 1936
Wichita, Kansas: Near Pikeville, Kentucky: 1991: 2015 [3] Served four states: Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky Associated routes: I-66 Spur in Kentucky The project was unpopular and ultimately cancelled without the interstate being completed; I-66 Spur eventually became I-165: I-66: 76.28: 122.76 I-81 in Front Royal, Virginia
Although Linnville is mentioned as never having a post office, [3] one map of Kansas on the Library of Congress website from 1870 mentions a "Linnville Paris P.O." [4] The Linnville Academy building was moved from Linnville to Pleasanton [5] in 1871. [1]
K-67 is a 0.972-mile-long (1.564 km) spur route that serves the Kansas Department of Corrections Norton Correctional Facility east of Norton in central Norton County. [1] [2] The highway begins at US-36 and K-383, which run concurrently east–west, and immediately has a grade crossing of the Kyle Railroad.