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State Route 96 (SR 96) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that follows the Trinity and Klamath Rivers between State Route 299 in Willow Creek and Interstate 5 near Yreka in Northern California.
State Route 263 (SR 263) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California in Siskiyou County, running parallel to Interstate 5 to the west. Route 263 connects State Route 3 near the north city limits of Yreka to State Route 96 eight miles (13 km) north.
School colors are red and gold. Yreka High School was the first high school in the county, founded in 1894. It has 11 feeder districts that serve the approximately 1,200 square miles (3,100 km 2) county area. [47] The Yreka elementary school district is composed of Evergreen Elementary as well as the Jackson Street Middle School.
The short piece from SR 36 north to Peanut was added to the state highway system in 1907 as part of the Peanut Road, [13] which became Route 35 in 1917. [14] Route 35 was extended north from Peanut to Route 20 near Douglas City in 1933, and simultaneously a new Route 82 was created, running from Route 3 in the Yreka area southwest to Etna and east to Montague.
Main Street in Turlock John W. Mitchell statue located at Turlock's downtown Central Park Various agriculture fields in Turlock Turlock is a city in Stanislaus County, California , United States. Its population was 72,740 at the 2020 United States Census , [ 7 ] making it the second-largest city in Stanislaus County after Modesto .
- Dorothea Lange's photo of a Missouri family of five in the vicinity of Tracy, California.jpg 4,116 × 4,336; 8.38 MB 1967 Mantra-Rock Dance Avalon poster.jpg 1,772 × 2,935; 5.94 MB 2010 mavericks competition.jpg 3,600 × 2,380; 2.34 MB
The highway started at the border with Baja California in Calexico, California. It then continued north along the western shore of the Salton Sea. The stretch is now known as SR 86. US 99 continued along present-day SR 111 through Coachella to its intersection at Dillon Road with another major US route signed as both US 60 and US 70.
An early road, an alternative to the Siskiyou Trail, wound its way up from Shasta, California, through Scott Valley to Yreka, California, and then into Oregon. This route remained in steady use until the development of more established stagecoach roads in the 1860s (and later the railroad in the 1880s) along the Sacramento River to the east.