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Oklahoma State Highway 74

State Highway 74, usually abbreviated as SH-74 or OK-74 (or simply Highway 74) is the numbering of two different highways maintained by the U.S. state of Oklahoma. These highways were once a single major north–south route, connecting Oklahoma City to more rural parts of the state. The original road stretched from SH-7 near Tatums, Oklahoma to SH-11 west of Deer Creek.

State Highway 74

Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Existed1927 (as SH-44)[1]
Became SH-74 in 1931[2]–present
Section 1
Length52.5 mi[3] (84.5 km)
South end SH-7 near Tatums
Major intersections
North end I-35 in Goldsby
Section 2
Length91.5 mi[4] (147.3 km)
South end I-44 / SH-3 / SH-66 in Bethany
Major intersections
North end SH-11 west of Deer Creek
Location
CountryUnited States
StateOklahoma
Highway system
  • Oklahoma State Highway System
SH-73 US 75

Due to encroaching Interstate highways—especially Interstate 35—the middle section of the route through Norman, Moore, and Oklahoma City was decommissioned in 1979 for reasons of redundancy. However, some maps show SH-74 as concurrent with I-35, I-240, and I-44, thus linking the two sections.

The north section of the route is 91+12 miles (147.3 km)[4] in length, while the southern section is 52+12 miles (84.5 km)[3] long. This leads to a total length of 144 miles (232 km).

Route descriptions

Southern section

 
The southern section's northern terminus, at I-35 in Goldsby.

From the southern terminus at SH-7, the southern section of SH-74 goes due north to Elmore City, where it intersects with SH-29. After a couple of turns in the Elmore City area, the highway continues due north to Maysville and SH-19. Still continuing northward, the highway meets the southern terminus of State Highway 24, and continues into Purcell.

In Purcell, SH-74 overlaps US-77 and SH-39. It finally splits off and begins heading west. From here, the highway becomes more hilly and curvy as it heads toward Washington. The road never actually enters Washington, passing just one mile[5] (1.6 km) north of it. However, Washington is accessible via SH-24, which has its northern terminus at SH-74 as well. (Both termini of SH-24 are at SH-74.)

The highway then returns to a due north course after its intersection with SH-24. It goes through the town of Goldsby and then ends at I-35.

Northern section

 
The southern end of the Lake Hefner Parkway in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma at its interchange with I-44

The highway's northern section begins at a combination interchange with Interstate 44 in Bethany. The first part of the northern section is a freeway, called the Lake Hefner Parkway because part of it runs along the east shore of Lake Hefner. The freeway, a major part of the Oklahoma City freeway system, serves the northwestern part of Oklahoma City. The freeway ends at 164th Street, and Highway 74 continues northward on Portland Avenue.

The road passes through the towns of Crescent, Covington, and Garber, Oklahoma as it continues, again on a due north course. Between Covington and Garber the road intersects with US-64/412, which can be used to access Enid, just 14 miles[6] (22.5 km) to the west.

Twenty miles[6] (32.2 km) north of US-412, the highway meets US-60 near Lamont. The two roads share a brief concurrency before splitting off again. Eight miles[6] (12.9 km) north of this, SH-74 intersects with SH-11 between Deer Creek and Numa, Oklahoma. It is at this intersection that the designation ends.

History

 

In 1927, a spur from SH-33 to Crescent was created as SH-44.[1] SH-44 was renumbered to SH-74 in 1931.[2] On December 10, 1934, SH-74 was extended southward to Oklahoma City.[7] The highway was further extended on September 9, 1935 to Norman.[7] In 1935 and 1936, the highway's alignment through Norman was modified; it was extended from its Main Street terminus to US-77.

Also in 1936, SH-74 began expanding northward. On August 18, the designation was added to a new section of highway between Crescent and US-64[8] (now State Highway 164) in Covington.[7] Nearly a year later, the route was extended southward again. The State Highway Commission lengthened SH-74 through Goldsby and Purcell to SH-19 in Maysville on July 1, 1937.[7] The section of highway from Covington to US-60 in Lamont was added on April 14, 1941.[7] On June 5, 1945, it was extended further south to SH-29 in Elmore City (at the time simply named Elmore).[7]

Throughout the 1950s, State Highway 74 continued to be realigned and extended. Southwest of Norman, it swapped routings with SH-9 on December 6, 1954.[7] SH-74 was extended twice in 1957, once in each direction: to the north on February 18 and to the south on June 10.[7] The 1957 lengthening brought SH-74 to its greatest length, with its present-day northern terminus and a southern terminus at State Highway 53 near Milo.

By 1967, I-35 had been constructed through Oklahoma City. On January 4, 1967, SH-74 was split into two sections, with the removal of the section between Goldsby and Norman.[7] The southern section was truncated on December 12, 1974, bringing the highway to its current southern terminus.[7] The gap between the two sections of SH-74 was widened on March 3, 1975, when the route was eliminated through Cleveland County and much of Oklahoma City, bringing SH-74 to its present-day termini.[7]

The Lake Hefner Parkway opened in 1992. SH-74 was transferred to the new freeway on April 6.[7] Between April and July 2001, ODOT installed a Brifen Safety Fence cable barrier along the Lake Hefner Parkway section of SH-74. This installation was the first application of this barrier design in the United States.[9] The freeway was extended from its former terminus just north of the Kilpatrick Turnpike to 164th Street in 2016.

Spurs

SH-74 currently has five spur routes (starting at B, and going up to a suffix of F). Prior to 2009, SH-74A served as a spur route in Norman as well, though it did not intersect SH-74.

SH-74A

 

State Highway 74A

LocationNorman
Length2.76 mi[10] (4.44 km)
ExistedSeptember 23, 1936–c. 2009

SH-74A ran along Lindsey Street in Norman, connecting I-35 to Classen Boulevard, the contemporary routing of US-77. This highway ran straight through the University of Oklahoma (OU) campus. It was 2.76 miles (4.44 km) long.[10]

SH-74A was established by action of the Highway Commission on September 23, 1936. The highway's original extent was from SH-9/SH-74 (24th Avenue S.W.) to the OU campus, ending at Jenkins Avenue.[11] It was later extended to I-35 in the west and US-77 in the east.[10] It was removed by January 2010.[12]

SH-74B

 

State Highway 74B

LocationMcClain County
Length9.95 mi[13] (16.01 km)

SH-74B connects SH-74 in Goldsby to SH-76 south of Blanchard. Cole lies along the middle of this hilly spur.

SH-74C

 

State Highway 74C

LocationLogan County
Length11.59 mi[14] (18.65 km)

SH-74C connects SH-74 in Crescent to US-77 north of Guthrie.

SH-74D

 

State Highway 74D

LocationLovell
Length2.76 mi[14] (4.44 km)
Existed?–March 5, 2018[15]

SH-74D connected SH-74 to the unincorporated community of Lovell. It was eliminated from the state highway system on March 5, 2018.[15]

SH-74E

 

State Highway 74E

LocationMarshall
Length4.98 mi[14] (8.01 km)

SH-74E goes from SH-51 north to Marshall, and then it goes east and ends at SH-74. This spur was commissioned on 1951-08-06.[7]

SH-74F

 

State Highway 74F

LocationCashion
Length8.05 mi[14] (12.96 km)

SH-74F goes from SH-74 west to Cashion, and then goes north to SH-33.

Junction list

Southern section

CountyLocationmi[3]kmDestinationsNotes
Carter0.000.00  SH-7 – Davis, Ratliff CitySouthern terminus; road continues as Poolville Road
GarvinElmore City9.515.3  SH-29
Maysville23.137.2  SH-19
GarvinMcClain
county line
25.741.4 
 
SH-24 north (100th Street)
Southern terminus of SH-24
McClain29.747.8  SH-59
Purcell35.056.3  I-35 – Okla. City, DallasI-35 exit 91
35.356.8 
 
US 77 south (Weedn Boulevard)
Southern end of US-77 concurrency
36.258.3 
 
SH-39 west (Wyatt Road)
Southern end of SH-39 concurrency
37.360.0 
 
 
 
US 77 north / SH-39 east (Washington Street)
Northern end of US-77/SH-39 concurrency
38.461.8 
 
 
To I-35 north / Green Avenue north – Okla. City
Goldsby47.075.6 
 
SH-24 south – Washington
Northern terminus of SH-24
49.078.9  SH-74BEastern terminus of SH-74B
52.584.5  I-35 – Okla. City, DallasNorthern terminus of southern section; I-35 exit 104
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Northern section

CountyLocationmi[4]kmExitDestinationsNotes
OklahomaOklahoma City0.000.00 
 
I-44 west (SH-3) to I-40
Southern terminus of northern section; southern terminus of Lake Hefner Parkway; southern end of SH-3 concurrency
 
 
I-44 east (SH-66 east) – Tulsa, Wichita
Southbound exit and northbound entrance
123B 
 
SH-66 west – Warr Acres, Bethany
Exit numbers follow I-44; no exit number southbound
1.11.8NW 50th Street
1.82.9  SH-3 (Northwest Expressway)Northern end of SH-3 concurrency
2.43.9NW 63rd StreetSouthbound exit and northbound entrance
4.36.9W. Britton Road
5.38.5W. Hefner Road
6.410.3NW 122nd Street
6.911.1 
 
Kilpatrick Turnpike east
Northbound exit and southbound entrance
7.111.4  Kilpatrick Turnpike / Memorial RoadNorthern terminus of Lake Hefner Pkwy.
8.113.0NW 150th Street
NW 164th StreetNorth end of freeway
Logan20.432.8  SH-74FEastern terminus of SH-74F
25.440.9  SH-33
Crescent31.450.5  SH-74CWestern terminus of SH-74C
38.461.8  SH-74DEastern terminus of SH-74D
42.568.4  SH-51
45.573.2  SH-74E
GarfieldCovington55.489.2  SH-164Western terminus of SH-164
Garber61.999.6   US 64 / US 412 – Enid, Perry
 
 
SH-15 begins
Diamond interchange with US-64/US-412
Western terminus of SH-15; southern end of SH-15 concurrency
71.4114.9 
 
SH-15 east – Ponca City, Billings
Northern end of SH-15 concurrency
Grant81.6131.3 
 
US 60 west
Western end of US-60 concurrency
Lamont83.5134.4 
 
US 60 east
Eastern end of US-60 concurrency
91.5147.3  SH-11 – Medford, BlackwellNorthern terminus; road continues as CR 1060 (unsigned)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b Oklahoma State Highway System 1928 (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma State Highway Commission.
  2. ^ a b Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma Department of Highways. 1932. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  3. ^ a b c Google (October 14, 2012). "Oklahoma State Highway 74" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved October 14, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c Google (October 15, 2012). "Oklahoma State Highway 74" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved October 15, 2012.
  5. ^ Distance signage at the SH-74/SH-24 junction.
  6. ^ a b c 2007 Centennial State Map (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2007-10-13.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Oklahoma Department of Transportation. "Memorial Dedication and Revision History". Retrieved October 14, 2007.
  8. ^ Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System and Landing Fields (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma Department of Highways. 1937. Retrieved October 14, 2007.
  9. ^ Griffin, Jeff (2002). . Better Roads (February 2002). Archived from the original on December 13, 2004.
  10. ^ a b c Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: Cleveland County (PDF) (Map) (2006 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2013-05-05.
  11. ^ Staff. "Moments in History—September". Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2013-05-05.
  12. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: Cleveland County (PDF) (Map) (2010–2011 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2013-05-05.
  13. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: McClain County (PDF) (Map) (2010–2011 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  14. ^ a b c d Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: Logan County (PDF) (Map) (2010–2011 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
  15. ^ a b Oklahoma Transportation Commission (March 5, 2018). "Minutes for the Transportation Committee Meeting" (PDF). Retrieved June 20, 2018.

External links

Route map:

KML is from Wikidata
  • SH-74's north section at OKHighways.com
  • SH-74's south section at OKHighways.com
    • SH-74B at OKHighways.com
    • SH-74C at OKHighways.com
    • SH-74D at OKHighways.com
    • SH-74E at OKHighways.com
    • SH-74F at OKHighways.com

oklahoma, state, highway, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, . This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Oklahoma State Highway 74 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message State Highway 74 usually abbreviated as SH 74 or OK 74 or simply Highway 74 is the numbering of two different highways maintained by the U S state of Oklahoma These highways were once a single major north south route connecting Oklahoma City to more rural parts of the state The original road stretched from SH 7 near Tatums Oklahoma to SH 11 west of Deer Creek State Highway 74Route informationMaintained by ODOTExisted1927 as SH 44 1 Became SH 74 in 1931 2 presentSection 1Length52 5 mi 3 84 5 km South endSH 7 near TatumsMajor intersectionsI 35 in Purcell US 77 in PurcellNorth endI 35 in GoldsbySection 2Length91 5 mi 4 147 3 km South endI 44 SH 3 SH 66 in BethanyMajor intersectionsKilpatrick Turnpike near The Village US 64 US 412 in Garber US 60 in LamontNorth endSH 11 west of Deer CreekLocationCountryUnited StatesStateOklahomaHighway systemOklahoma State Highway SystemInterstate US State Turnpikes SH 73 US 75Due to encroaching Interstate highways especially Interstate 35 the middle section of the route through Norman Moore and Oklahoma City was decommissioned in 1979 for reasons of redundancy However some maps show SH 74 as concurrent with I 35 I 240 and I 44 thus linking the two sections The north section of the route is 91 1 2 miles 147 3 km 4 in length while the southern section is 52 1 2 miles 84 5 km 3 long This leads to a total length of 144 miles 232 km Contents 1 Route descriptions 1 1 Southern section 1 2 Northern section 2 History 3 Spurs 3 1 SH 74A 3 2 SH 74B 3 3 SH 74C 3 4 SH 74D 3 5 SH 74E 3 6 SH 74F 4 Junction list 4 1 Southern section 4 2 Northern section 5 References 6 External linksRoute descriptions EditSouthern section Edit The southern section s northern terminus at I 35 in Goldsby From the southern terminus at SH 7 the southern section of SH 74 goes due north to Elmore City where it intersects with SH 29 After a couple of turns in the Elmore City area the highway continues due north to Maysville and SH 19 Still continuing northward the highway meets the southern terminus of State Highway 24 and continues into Purcell In Purcell SH 74 overlaps US 77 and SH 39 It finally splits off and begins heading west From here the highway becomes more hilly and curvy as it heads toward Washington The road never actually enters Washington passing just one mile 5 1 6 km north of it However Washington is accessible via SH 24 which has its northern terminus at SH 74 as well Both termini of SH 24 are at SH 74 The highway then returns to a due north course after its intersection with SH 24 It goes through the town of Goldsby and then ends at I 35 Northern section Edit The southern end of the Lake Hefner Parkway in Oklahoma City Oklahoma at its interchange with I 44The highway s northern section begins at a combination interchange with Interstate 44 in Bethany The first part of the northern section is a freeway called the Lake Hefner Parkway because part of it runs along the east shore of Lake Hefner The freeway a major part of the Oklahoma City freeway system serves the northwestern part of Oklahoma City The freeway ends at 164th Street and Highway 74 continues northward on Portland Avenue The road passes through the towns of Crescent Covington and Garber Oklahoma as it continues again on a due north course Between Covington and Garber the road intersects with US 64 412 which can be used to access Enid just 14 miles 6 22 5 km to the west Twenty miles 6 32 2 km north of US 412 the highway meets US 60 near Lamont The two roads share a brief concurrency before splitting off again Eight miles 6 12 9 km north of this SH 74 intersects with SH 11 between Deer Creek and Numa Oklahoma It is at this intersection that the designation ends History Edit In 1927 a spur from SH 33 to Crescent was created as SH 44 1 SH 44 was renumbered to SH 74 in 1931 2 On December 10 1934 SH 74 was extended southward to Oklahoma City 7 The highway was further extended on September 9 1935 to Norman 7 In 1935 and 1936 the highway s alignment through Norman was modified it was extended from its Main Street terminus to US 77 Also in 1936 SH 74 began expanding northward On August 18 the designation was added to a new section of highway between Crescent and US 64 8 now State Highway 164 in Covington 7 Nearly a year later the route was extended southward again The State Highway Commission lengthened SH 74 through Goldsby and Purcell to SH 19 in Maysville on July 1 1937 7 The section of highway from Covington to US 60 in Lamont was added on April 14 1941 7 On June 5 1945 it was extended further south to SH 29 in Elmore City at the time simply named Elmore 7 Throughout the 1950s State Highway 74 continued to be realigned and extended Southwest of Norman it swapped routings with SH 9 on December 6 1954 7 SH 74 was extended twice in 1957 once in each direction to the north on February 18 and to the south on June 10 7 The 1957 lengthening brought SH 74 to its greatest length with its present day northern terminus and a southern terminus at State Highway 53 near Milo By 1967 I 35 had been constructed through Oklahoma City On January 4 1967 SH 74 was split into two sections with the removal of the section between Goldsby and Norman 7 The southern section was truncated on December 12 1974 bringing the highway to its current southern terminus 7 The gap between the two sections of SH 74 was widened on March 3 1975 when the route was eliminated through Cleveland County and much of Oklahoma City bringing SH 74 to its present day termini 7 The Lake Hefner Parkway opened in 1992 SH 74 was transferred to the new freeway on April 6 7 Between April and July 2001 ODOT installed a Brifen Safety Fence cable barrier along the Lake Hefner Parkway section of SH 74 This installation was the first application of this barrier design in the United States 9 The freeway was extended from its former terminus just north of the Kilpatrick Turnpike to 164th Street in 2016 Spurs EditSH 74 currently has five spur routes starting at B and going up to a suffix of F Prior to 2009 SH 74A served as a spur route in Norman as well though it did not intersect SH 74 SH 74A Edit State Highway 74ALocationNormanLength2 76 mi 10 4 44 km ExistedSeptember 23 1936 c 2009SH 74A ran along Lindsey Street in Norman connecting I 35 to Classen Boulevard the contemporary routing of US 77 This highway ran straight through the University of Oklahoma OU campus It was 2 76 miles 4 44 km long 10 SH 74A was established by action of the Highway Commission on September 23 1936 The highway s original extent was from SH 9 SH 74 24th Avenue S W to the OU campus ending at Jenkins Avenue 11 It was later extended to I 35 in the west and US 77 in the east 10 It was removed by January 2010 12 SH 74B Edit State Highway 74BLocationMcClain CountyLength9 95 mi 13 16 01 km SH 74B connects SH 74 in Goldsby to SH 76 south of Blanchard Cole lies along the middle of this hilly spur SH 74C Edit State Highway 74CLocationLogan CountyLength11 59 mi 14 18 65 km SH 74C connects SH 74 in Crescent to US 77 north of Guthrie SH 74D Edit State Highway 74DLocationLovellLength2 76 mi 14 4 44 km Existed March 5 2018 15 SH 74D connected SH 74 to the unincorporated community of Lovell It was eliminated from the state highway system on March 5 2018 15 SH 74E Edit State Highway 74ELocationMarshallLength4 98 mi 14 8 01 km SH 74E goes from SH 51 north to Marshall and then it goes east and ends at SH 74 This spur was commissioned on 1951 08 06 7 SH 74F Edit State Highway 74FLocationCashionLength8 05 mi 14 12 96 km SH 74F goes from SH 74 west to Cashion and then goes north to SH 33 Junction list EditSouthern section Edit CountyLocationmi 3 kmDestinationsNotesCarter 0 000 00 SH 7 Davis Ratliff CitySouthern terminus road continues as Poolville RoadGarvinElmore City9 515 3 SH 29Maysville23 137 2 SH 19Garvin McClaincounty line 25 741 4 SH 24 north 100th Street Southern terminus of SH 24McClain 29 747 8 SH 59Purcell35 056 3 I 35 Okla City DallasI 35 exit 9135 356 8 US 77 south Weedn Boulevard Southern end of US 77 concurrency36 258 3 SH 39 west Wyatt Road Southern end of SH 39 concurrency37 360 0 US 77 north SH 39 east Washington Street Northern end of US 77 SH 39 concurrency38 461 8 To I 35 north Green Avenue north Okla CityGoldsby47 075 6 SH 24 south WashingtonNorthern terminus of SH 2449 078 9 SH 74BEastern terminus of SH 74B52 584 5 I 35 Okla City DallasNorthern terminus of southern section I 35 exit 1041 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusNorthern section Edit CountyLocationmi 4 kmExitDestinationsNotesOklahomaOklahoma City0 000 00 I 44 west SH 3 to I 40Southern terminus of northern section southern terminus of Lake Hefner Parkway southern end of SH 3 concurrency I 44 east SH 66 east Tulsa WichitaSouthbound exit and northbound entrance123B SH 66 west Warr Acres BethanyExit numbers follow I 44 no exit number southbound1 11 8 NW 50th Street1 82 9 SH 3 Northwest Expressway Northern end of SH 3 concurrency2 43 9 NW 63rd StreetSouthbound exit and northbound entrance4 36 9 W Britton Road5 38 5 W Hefner Road6 410 3 NW 122nd Street6 911 1 Kilpatrick Turnpike eastNorthbound exit and southbound entrance7 111 4 Kilpatrick Turnpike Memorial RoadNorthern terminus of Lake Hefner Pkwy 8 113 0 NW 150th Street NW 164th StreetNorth end of freewayLogan 20 432 8 SH 74FEastern terminus of SH 74F 25 440 9 SH 33Crescent31 450 5 SH 74CWestern terminus of SH 74C 38 461 8 SH 74DEastern terminus of SH 74D 42 568 4 SH 51 45 573 2 SH 74EGarfieldCovington55 489 2 SH 164Western terminus of SH 164Garber61 999 6 US 64 US 412 Enid Perry SH 15 beginsDiamond interchange with US 64 US 412Western terminus of SH 15 southern end of SH 15 concurrency 71 4114 9 SH 15 east Ponca City BillingsNorthern end of SH 15 concurrencyGrant 81 6131 3 US 60 westWestern end of US 60 concurrencyLamont83 5134 4 US 60 eastEastern end of US 60 concurrency 91 5147 3 SH 11 Medford BlackwellNorthern terminus road continues as CR 1060 unsigned 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete access TolledReferences Edit a b Oklahoma State Highway System 1928 PDF Map Oklahoma State Highway Commission a b Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System PDF Map Oklahoma Department of Highways 1932 Retrieved 2007 10 14 a b c Google October 14 2012 Oklahoma State Highway 74 Map Google Maps Google Retrieved October 14 2012 a b c Google October 15 2012 Oklahoma State Highway 74 Map Google Maps Google Retrieved October 15 2012 Distance signage at the SH 74 SH 24 junction a b c 2007 Centennial State Map PDF Map Oklahoma Department of Transportation Retrieved 2007 10 13 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Oklahoma Department of Transportation Memorial Dedication and Revision History Retrieved October 14 2007 Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System and Landing Fields PDF Map Oklahoma Department of Highways 1937 Retrieved October 14 2007 Griffin Jeff 2002 Highway Safety Barrier System Will Cut Accident Rates Better Roads February 2002 Archived from the original on December 13 2004 a b c Oklahoma Department of Transportation n d Control Section Maps Cleveland County PDF Map 2006 ed Scale not given Oklahoma City Oklahoma Department of Transportation Retrieved 2013 05 05 Staff Moments in History September Oklahoma Department of Transportation Retrieved 2013 05 05 Oklahoma Department of Transportation n d Control Section Maps Cleveland County PDF Map 2010 2011 ed Scale not given Oklahoma City Oklahoma Department of Transportation Retrieved 2013 05 05 Oklahoma Department of Transportation n d Control Section Maps McClain County PDF Map 2010 2011 ed Scale not given Oklahoma City Oklahoma Department of Transportation Retrieved 2012 07 26 a b c d Oklahoma Department of Transportation n d Control Section Maps Logan County PDF Map 2010 2011 ed Scale not given Oklahoma City Oklahoma Department of Transportation Retrieved 2012 07 26 a b Oklahoma Transportation Commission March 5 2018 Minutes for the Transportation Committee Meeting PDF Retrieved June 20 2018 External links EditRoute map KML file edit help Template Attached KML Oklahoma State Highway 74KML is from Wikidata SH 74 s north section at OKHighways com SH 74 s south section at OKHighways com SH 74B at OKHighways com SH 74C at OKHighways com SH 74D at OKHighways com SH 74E at OKHighways com SH 74F at OKHighways com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oklahoma State Highway 74 amp oldid 1135213984, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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