U.S. Route 73

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U.S. Route 73 marker
U.S. Route 73
US 73 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by KDOT, NDOT, and the cities of Leavenworth, Atchison and Horton
Length113.14 mi[a] (182.08 km)
91.120 mi (146.643 km) in Kansas[1]
22.05 mi (35.49 km) in Nebraska[2]
Existed1926[citation needed]–present
Major junctions
South end I-70 / US-24 / US-40 / K-7 in Bonner Springs, KS
  K-7 in Atchison, KS
US-59 in Atchison, KS
US-36 in Hiawatha, KS
North end US 75 in Dawson, NE
Location
StatesKansas, Nebraska
CountiesKS: Wyandotte, Leavenworth, Atchison, Brown
NE: Richardson
Highway system

U.S. Route 73 (US 73) is a north–south United States highway that runs for 113 miles (182 km) from northeast Kansas to southeast Nebraska. The highway's southern terminus is Bonner Springs, Kansas at I-70. Its northern terminus is near Dawson, Nebraska at US 75.

Route description[]

Kansas[]

US-73's former southern terminus at I-435 in Kansas City.

U.S. Route 73 begins at I-70 in Kansas City in a concurrency with U.S. Route 24, U.S. Route 40, and K-7. Two miles north of its terminus, US 24 and US 40 turn west, while US 73 continues north with K-7. It continues north with K-7 through Lansing, where it intersects K-5. US 73 and K-7 then continue through Leavenworth. It goes northwesterly from Leavenworth, meeting K-192 near Easton and at Atchison, turns west. At Atchison, it loses K-7 and is briefly concurrent with U.S. Route 59. It goes west and turns northwest near Lancaster at its intersection with K-9. It goes through Huron and begins a concurrency with K-20 near Everest. It goes west into Horton and intersects U.S. Route 159. The two highways continue north together and meet U.S. Route 36 at Hiawatha. After a brief northwesterly routing through Reserve, US-73 and US-159 turn north and enter Nebraska.

Nebraska[]

U.S. Route 73 enters Nebraska south of Falls City still concurrent with U.S. Route 159. They run north into Falls City and separate. Shortly after leaving Falls City, US 73 turns west, passes through Verdon, and ends at U.S. Route 75 just north of Dawson.

History[]

The original southern terminus was at Atoka, Oklahoma at an intersection with U.S. Highway 75. From the creation of the highway in 1926 until April 11, 1935,[3] US 73 was split between Oswego, Kansas and Horton, Kansas. US 73E followed modern US 160 from Oswego to Columbus, then modern US 69 to Kansas City, where it then latched onto what is now US 73. The US 73E designated then went from Kansas City to Horton. US 73W followed the route of modern U.S. Route 59 from Oswego to K-39, K-39 west to Chanute, modern U.S. Route 169 from Chanute to Garnett, modern US 59 again from Garnett to Nortonville, and then modern U.S. Route 159 from Nortonville to Horton. On April 10, 1935, US 73 was truncated at Kansas City with the modern designations taking over the old routes and US 69 taking over the Atoka-Oswego segment.[4] In Kansas City, US 73 previously followed U.S. Route 24 into downtown Kansas City, Kansas, terminating at the Intercity Viaduct (Lewis and Clark Viaduct), before Interstate 435 was completed. After I-435 was completed, US 73 ended at its intersection with I-435. On December 1, 2008, the southern terminus was rerouted, along with US 24 and US 40, southward along K-7 to its new terminus at I-70.[5]

Nebraska also had a split highway, with the split between Tekamah and Winnebago between 1935 and 1957. US 73E went north through Decatur along the current route of U.S. Route 75, while US 73W went west from Tekamah along current Nebraska Highway 32 to Oakland, then north from Oakland in a concurrency with U.S. Route 77.

The original northern terminus was south of Auburn, Nebraska, near Howe, Nebraska. US 73 went east through Howe, then south to Stella, Nebraska, then east through Shubert, Nebraska, then south to the current highway.[6] In 1932, the highway was extended to South Sioux City, Nebraska. In 1965, the route was shortened to Winnebago, Nebraska. In 1984, U.S. 75 was removed from western Iowa along Interstate 29 and placed on U.S. 73's route, superseding it through Omaha, Nebraska and truncating the highway to its present northern terminus near Dawson, Nebraska.

K-227 marker

K-227

LocationAtchison
ExistedSeptember 9, 1968–1980

K-227 was a highway in Kansas that was designated on September 9, 1968.[7] K-227's southern terminus was at K-4 and U.S. Route 59 (US-59) in the city of Atchison and the northern terminus was at K-9 and US-73 in Atchison. In 1980, US-73 was realigned along K-227 and at that time K-227 was decommissioned.

Major intersections[]

StateCountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
KansasWyandotteBonner Springs0.0000.000 I-70 / Kansas Turnpike west / US-24 east / US-40 east / K-7 south – Olathe, Topeka, St. LouisSouthern end of US-24, US-40, and K-7 overlaps
Bonner SpringsKansas City line1.5842.549 US-24 west / US-40 west (State Avenue)Interchange; northern end of US-24 and US-40 overlaps
LeavenworthLeavenworth K-5 south – Leavenworth National Cemetery
K-92 west (Spruce Street) – McLouthSouthern end of K-92 overlap
K-92 east – Platte City Mo.Northern end of K-92 overlap
CR 14 (Santa Fe Trail) / N. 20th StreetInterchange
Kickapoo Township K-192 west – Easton
AtchisonWalnut Township K-74 west – Potter
Atchison K-7 north (10th Street) / US-59 north – Troy, St. Joseph Mo.Northern end of K-7 overlap; southern end of US-59 overlap
US-59 south – OskaloosaNorthern end of US-59 overlap

To K-7 north / Woodlawn Avenue – Amelia Earhart Airport
Lancaster Township K-9 west – Effingham
BrownWashington Township K-20 east – EverestSouthern end of K-20 overlap
Horton US-159 south – MuscotahSouthern end of US-159 overlap

K-20 west to US-75
Northern end of K-20 overlap
Hiawatha US-36 – Seneca, TroyInterchange
 91.12
0.00
146.64
0.00
Kansas–Nebraska state line
NebraskaRichardsonFalls City4.116.61 US 159 north (E. 14th Street) – RuloNorthern end of US 159 overlap
4.597.39 N-8 west (21st Street) – Salem
– line13.4921.71 N-67 north – Indian Cave State Park
22.0535.49 US 75 – Dawson, Omaha
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Notes[]

  1. ^ Mileage is a summation of each state's length

References[]

  1. ^ Kansas Department of Transportation (2009). "PMIS Query". Retrieved August 31, 2013.
  2. ^ "Nebraska Highway Reference Log Book" (PDF). Nebraska Department of Roads. 2015. p. 179. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
  3. ^ "New Highway Number". Council Grove Republican. April 11, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved February 27, 2020 – via Newspapers.com. open access
  4. ^ "Change Numbers on U.S. Highway". Lawrence Journal-World. 10 April 1935. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  5. ^ AASHTO October 2008 meeting
  6. ^ Nebraska Highways 61 to 100[unreliable source]
  7. ^ State Highway Commission of Kansas (September 11, 1968). "Resolution for relocation and redesignation of Road in Atchison County". Topeka: State Highway Commission of Kansas. Retrieved April 28, 2020.

External links[]

Route map:

KML is from Wikidata
Browse numbered routes
K-71KS K-74
N-71NE N-74
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