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U.S. Route 99

U.S. Route 99 (US 99) was a main north–south United States Numbered Highway on the West Coast of the United States until 1964, running from Calexico, California, on the Mexican border to Blaine, Washington, on the Canadian border. It was assigned in 1926 and existed until it was replaced for the most part by Interstate 5. Known also as the "Golden State Highway" and "The Main Street of California", US 99 was important throughout much of the 1930s as a route for Dust Bowl immigrant farm workers to traverse the state. Large portions are now California State Route 99 (SR 99), Oregon's Routes 99, 99W, and 99E, and Washington's SR 99. The highway in Washington connected to British Columbia Highway 99, whose number was derived from that of US 99, at the Canada–US border.

U.S. Route 99

US 99 highlighted in red
Route information
Length1,600 mi[1] (2,600 km)
Existed1926–1972[2]
Major junctions
South end Fed. 5 at Mexican border in Calexico, CA
Major intersections
North end Hwy 99 at Canadian border in Blaine, WA
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesCalifornia, Oregon, Washington
Highway system

Route description edit

 
Historic southern terminus of US 99 in Calexico, CA

California edit

The basic former route of U.S. Route 99 in California started at the Mexico–United States border in Calexico, and then ran north through the Imperial Valley and along the western shore of the Salton Sea to the Coachella Valley (roughly present-day California State Route 86 and California State Route 111). US 99 then headed west to Los Angeles (present-day Interstate 10), and then north again to the Central Valley (present-day Interstate 5). US 99 then continued along the present-day corridor of California State Route 99 to Bakersfield, Fresno, and Sacramento. In Sacramento, the highway split into two suffixed routes, 99W and 99E. US 99W roughly followed the route of present-day Interstate 5 on the western side of the Sacramento Valley, and US 99E followed present-day State Route 99 on the eastern side of the valley. Both highways merged back together in Red Bluff, and US 99 continued along the present-day Interstate 5 corridor to the Oregon border.

 
U.S. Route 99 in Grants Pass, Oregon, 1939

Oregon edit

The former route of U.S. Route 99 in Oregon mostly follows routes currently signed as Oregon Route 99, 99E, and 99W. The primary exception is from the California–Oregon state border north to Ashland, Oregon, where U.S. 99 is currently named Oregon Route 273 from the state border to Exit 6 of Interstate 5. The former route is coterminous with Interstate 5 from Exit 6 to the junction of Oregon Route 99 in Ashland.

Washington edit

Unlike in California and Oregon, much of the former route of U.S. Highway 99 in Washington exists as local roads and regular city streets; only the route from Fife to Everett still retains the same number as State Route 99. US 99 went through two stages of redevelopment in Washington. The first was a general replacement of the original two-lane highway with a four-lane limited-access highway. At that time, the limited-access highway was badged as US 99, and any parallel original route was generally known as "old 99". The second phase was the development of an Interstate Highway, much of which followed the new 99 route and is known as I-5.

History edit

 
US 99 Sign in Downtown Seattle, at the entrance to the old Alaskan Way Viaduct. The viaduct was torn down in 2019 after it was replaced by the State Route 99 tunnel.

An extensive section of this highway (over 600 miles [970 km]), from approximately Stockton, California to Vancouver, Washington, follows very closely the track of the Siskiyou Trail. The Siskiyou Trail was based on an ancient network of Native American Indian footpaths connecting the Pacific Northwest with California's Central Valley. By the 1820s, trappers from the Hudson's Bay Company were the first non-Native Americans to use the route of U.S. Highway 99 to move between today's Washington state and California. During the second half of the 19th Century, mule train trails, stagecoach roads, and the path of the Central Pacific railroad (later the Southern Pacific railroad) also followed the route of the Siskiyou Trail. By the early 20th Century, pioneering automobile roads were built along the Siskiyou Trail, including most notably the Pacific Highway. The Pacific Highway ran from British Columbia to San Diego, California and is the immediate predecessor of much of U.S. Highway 99. The highway was continuous pavement by the middle 1930s.

Decommissioning edit

By 1968, US 99 was completely decommissioned with the near completion of I-5 in Washington and California, but the highway's phasing out actually began July 1, 1964, when Collier Senate Bill No. 64 passed on September 20, 1963. The bill launched a major program designed to greatly simplify California's increasingly complicated highway numbering system and eliminate concurrent postings. The highways that replaced it are

  • SR 111 and SR 86 between the Mexico–US border and Indio.
  • I-10, replacing US 60 and US 70 between Indio and Los Angeles as well.
  • U.S. Route 101 and SR 110 in downtown Los Angeles.
  • I-5 from north of downtown Los Angeles to its modern-day split in Wheeler Ridge before 99's final decommissioning in 1968.

In 1972, AASHTO gave permission to the Oregon State Highway Commission to retire US 99W, US 99E and US 99 from the national system.[2] The final segments of US 99 were then decommissioned and re-organized into OR 99W, OR 99E and OR 99.

Successor highways edit

All three states have replaced some portions of US 99 with state highways of the same number:

 
Historic US 99 in California
  • Oregon: Most of former US 99 in Oregon now signed as Oregon Route 99 (OR 99). The route still provides surface-level access to many southern Oregon towns served by I-5. It also provides access to many towns in the Willamette Valley. Between Junction City and Portland, the highway splits into eastern and western routes known as OR 99E and OR 99W, respectively. For significant stretches, OR 99 shares an alignment with I-5. Officially, the highway is signed with both route numbers when this occurs; however, in practice, this is often not the case as the OR 99 designation is dropped in favor of I-5. One notable exception is a stretch of OR 99E that runs between Albany and Salem, where OR 99E is cosigned along the highway.
  • California: The 425-mile (684 km) stretch between Wheeler Ridge and Red Bluff is signed as State Route 99 which makes it California's second-longest state highway behind SR 1. However, the newly enacted Historic U.S. Route 99 extends from Indio starting from Interstate 10 in the Coachella Valley all the way down the Imperial Valley to Calexico on the US-Mexico border with Mexicali, Baja California, Mexico.

Major intersections edit

California[3]
Oregon[6]
Washington[7]

Special routes edit

US Route 99W (California) edit

US 99W in California ran from Sacramento, where it diverged from highway 99E, to Red Bluff. This section of the highway ran through towns such as Corning, Orland, Willows, Artois, Williams, and Maxwell. This section of the highway runs parallel with current day Interstate 5.[8]

US Route 99E (California) edit

US 99E in California ran from Sacramento to Red Bluff and was partially concurrent to California State Route 36. This section of the highway ran through towns such as Chico, Durham, Richvale, and Yuba City. This section of the highway is currently used as part of California's State Route 99.[8]

US Route 99W (Oregon) edit

 

U.S. Highway 99W

LocationJunction City-Portland
Existed1926–1972

US 99W in Oregon ran from Junction City, where it diverged from highway 99E, to Portland. The US designation was redesignated as Oregon Route 99W in 1972. In 1994, Oregon 99W was truncated to Interstate 5 in Tigard at Exit 294. As such, highways 99W and 99E no longer converge.

US Route 99E (Oregon) edit

 

U.S. Highway 99E

LocationJunction CityPortland
Existed1926–1972

US 99E in Oregon ran from Junction City, where it diverged from highway 99W, to Portland, but using a different route than highway 99W. A segment between Albany and Salem is cosigned with Interstate 5. Like its western counterpart, US 99E was changed to state highway 99E in 1972. Its current northern terminus is at Interstate 5 in Delta Park near the Portland Expo Center at Exit 307.

Alternate routes in Washington edit

 

 

U.S. Route 99 Alternate

LocationBellingham
Existed1931–1964

 

 

U.S. Route 99 Alternate

LocationBellinghamCanadian border
Existed1952–1969

Two routes in Washington were designated US Route 99 Alternate; both passed through parts of Bellingham, and for about twelve years both had this designation at the same time.

In 1931, a new route for US 99 was constructed near the east side of Lake Samish (similar to the route of today's Interstate 5), and US 99 was moved to this new road. As a result, the older 99 route past Bellingham Bay (Chuckanut Drive) was designated as US 99 Alternate. Today, this older route is Washington State Route 11.[citation needed]

Beginning in 1952, the other US Route 99 Alternate began in downtown Bellingham and went due north along the Guide Meridian to Lynden and then to Canada.[9] This highway was decommissioned in 1969 and is today known as Washington State Route 539.[10]

Both of these routes were renumbered in the 1960s when the state decommissioned all of US Route 99 and scrapped its entire highway numbering system to replace it with a new system.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

Travel on U.S. Route 99 is highlighted in a long poem by Gary Snyder, "Night Highway 99".[11] The Sega videogame Sonic Advance 3 has a zone titled "Route 99," but this could be coincidental.[citation needed]

Route 99 was planned to be featured in Pixar's Cars 3, as confirmed by Michael Wallis.[12] However, this never went through.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Livingston, Jill; Maloof, Kathryn Golden (2003). That Ribbon of Highway III: Highway 99 through the Pacific Northwest. Klamath River, California: Living Gold Press. ISBN 0965137767.
  2. ^ a b U.S. Route Numbering Subcommittee (December 3, 1971). "U.S. Route Numbering Subcommittee Agenda" (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 418. Retrieved October 29, 2014 – via Wikisource.
  3. ^ California State Highway Map, 1963 (Map). California Department of Public Works Highway Division. 1963. Retrieved July 27, 2023 – via David Rumsey Map Collection.
  4. ^ a b (Map). Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  5. ^ California State Highway Map 1961 (Map). California State Department of Public Works Highway Division. August 19, 1961. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  6. ^ Official Highway Map of Oregon (Map). Oregon State Highway Department. 1963. Retrieved July 27, 2023 – via Oregon State Library.
  7. ^ Washington State Department of Highways (1963). Washington State Highways: Official Highway Map and Tourist Guide of the State of Washington (Map). Olympia: Washington State Highway Commission. Retrieved July 27, 2023 – via WSDOT Library Digital Collections.
  8. ^ a b Livingston, Jill (2016). That Ribbon of Highway I. Klamath River, California: Living Gold Press. ISBN 9780965137737.
  9. ^ "Correspondence from Hal H. Hale to W. A. Bugge". July 25, 1952. p. 1. Retrieved March 9, 2021 – via AASHTO Route Numbering Archive.
  10. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Subcommittee (June 24, 1969). "U.S. Route Numbering Subcommittee Agenda Showing Action Taken by the Executive Committee" (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 382. Retrieved March 9, 2021 – via Wikisource.
  11. ^ Snyder, Gary (2018). "Night Highway 99". Mountains and Rivers Without End. Berkeley, California: Counterpoint. ISBN 9781582439006. Retrieved March 3, 2021 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ Sims, Andrew. "Voice actor says 'Cars 3' in the works, will feature California's Route 99". Hypable. Retrieved June 6, 2021.

External links edit

route, main, north, south, united, states, numbered, highway, west, coast, united, states, until, 1964, running, from, calexico, california, mexican, border, blaine, washington, canadian, border, assigned, 1926, existed, until, replaced, most, part, interstate. U S Route 99 US 99 was a main north south United States Numbered Highway on the West Coast of the United States until 1964 running from Calexico California on the Mexican border to Blaine Washington on the Canadian border It was assigned in 1926 and existed until it was replaced for the most part by Interstate 5 Known also as the Golden State Highway and The Main Street of California US 99 was important throughout much of the 1930s as a route for Dust Bowl immigrant farm workers to traverse the state Large portions are now California State Route 99 SR 99 Oregon s Routes 99 99W and 99E and Washington s SR 99 The highway in Washington connected to British Columbia Highway 99 whose number was derived from that of US 99 at the Canada US border U S Route 99US 99 highlighted in redRoute informationLength1 600 mi 1 2 600 km Existed1926 1972 2 Major junctionsSouth endFed 5 at Mexican border in Calexico CAMajor intersectionsUS 80 in El Centro CA US 60 US 70 in Los Angeles CA US 6 US 66 US 101 in Los Angeles CA US 50 from French Camp CA to Sacramento CA US 40 from Davis CA to Roseville CA US 20 in Corvallis OR Albany OR US 30 in Portland OR US 101 US 410 in Olympia WA US 10 in Seattle WANorth endHwy 99 at Canadian border in Blaine WALocationCountryUnited StatesStatesCalifornia Oregon WashingtonHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway SystemList Special Divided US 98US US 101 SR 98CA SR 99 US 97OR OR 99 US 97WA SR 99 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 California 1 2 Oregon 1 3 Washington 2 History 2 1 Decommissioning 2 2 Successor highways 3 Major intersections 4 Special routes 4 1 US Route 99W California 4 2 US Route 99E California 4 3 US Route 99W Oregon 4 4 US Route 99E Oregon 4 5 Alternate routes in Washington 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksRoute description edit nbsp Historic southern terminus of US 99 in Calexico CACalifornia edit Main article U S Route 99 in California The basic former route of U S Route 99 in California started at the Mexico United States border in Calexico and then ran north through the Imperial Valley and along the western shore of the Salton Sea to the Coachella Valley roughly present day California State Route 86 and California State Route 111 US 99 then headed west to Los Angeles present day Interstate 10 and then north again to the Central Valley present day Interstate 5 US 99 then continued along the present day corridor of California State Route 99 to Bakersfield Fresno and Sacramento In Sacramento the highway split into two suffixed routes 99W and 99E US 99W roughly followed the route of present day Interstate 5 on the western side of the Sacramento Valley and US 99E followed present day State Route 99 on the eastern side of the valley Both highways merged back together in Red Bluff and US 99 continued along the present day Interstate 5 corridor to the Oregon border nbsp U S Route 99 in Grants Pass Oregon 1939Oregon edit The former route of U S Route 99 in Oregon mostly follows routes currently signed as Oregon Route 99 99E and 99W The primary exception is from the California Oregon state border north to Ashland Oregon where U S 99 is currently named Oregon Route 273 from the state border to Exit 6 of Interstate 5 The former route is coterminous with Interstate 5 from Exit 6 to the junction of Oregon Route 99 in Ashland Washington edit Unlike in California and Oregon much of the former route of U S Highway 99 in Washington exists as local roads and regular city streets only the route from Fife to Everett still retains the same number as State Route 99 US 99 went through two stages of redevelopment in Washington The first was a general replacement of the original two lane highway with a four lane limited access highway At that time the limited access highway was badged as US 99 and any parallel original route was generally known as old 99 The second phase was the development of an Interstate Highway much of which followed the new 99 route and is known as I 5 History edit nbsp US 99 Sign in Downtown Seattle at the entrance to the old Alaskan Way Viaduct The viaduct was torn down in 2019 after it was replaced by the State Route 99 tunnel An extensive section of this highway over 600 miles 970 km from approximately Stockton California to Vancouver Washington follows very closely the track of the Siskiyou Trail The Siskiyou Trail was based on an ancient network of Native American Indian footpaths connecting the Pacific Northwest with California s Central Valley By the 1820s trappers from the Hudson s Bay Company were the first non Native Americans to use the route of U S Highway 99 to move between today s Washington state and California During the second half of the 19th Century mule train trails stagecoach roads and the path of the Central Pacific railroad later the Southern Pacific railroad also followed the route of the Siskiyou Trail By the early 20th Century pioneering automobile roads were built along the Siskiyou Trail including most notably the Pacific Highway The Pacific Highway ran from British Columbia to San Diego California and is the immediate predecessor of much of U S Highway 99 The highway was continuous pavement by the middle 1930s Decommissioning edit By 1968 US 99 was completely decommissioned with the near completion of I 5 in Washington and California but the highway s phasing out actually began July 1 1964 when Collier Senate Bill No 64 passed on September 20 1963 The bill launched a major program designed to greatly simplify California s increasingly complicated highway numbering system and eliminate concurrent postings The highways that replaced it are SR 111 and SR 86 between the Mexico US border and Indio I 10 replacing US 60 and US 70 between Indio and Los Angeles as well U S Route 101 and SR 110 in downtown Los Angeles I 5 from north of downtown Los Angeles to its modern day split in Wheeler Ridge before 99 s final decommissioning in 1968 In 1972 AASHTO gave permission to the Oregon State Highway Commission to retire US 99W US 99E and US 99 from the national system 2 The final segments of US 99 were then decommissioned and re organized into OR 99W OR 99E and OR 99 Successor highways edit All three states have replaced some portions of US 99 with state highways of the same number Washington 50 miles 80 km of US 99 from Fife in Pierce County to Everett in Snohomish County is now State Route 99 It is mostly a surface level highway with the exception of the SR 99 Tunnel through downtown Seattle The tunnel was created to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct which was torn down in 2019 A 4 mile section of the old US 99 through unincorporated Hazel Dell and Salmon Creek north of Vancouver Washington is still known as NE Highway 99 Other portions of the old US 99 are now designated as SR 505 SR 529 and SR 530 nbsp Historic US 99 in CaliforniaOregon Most of former US 99 in Oregon now signed as Oregon Route 99 OR 99 The route still provides surface level access to many southern Oregon towns served by I 5 It also provides access to many towns in the Willamette Valley Between Junction City and Portland the highway splits into eastern and western routes known as OR 99E and OR 99W respectively For significant stretches OR 99 shares an alignment with I 5 Officially the highway is signed with both route numbers when this occurs however in practice this is often not the case as the OR 99 designation is dropped in favor of I 5 One notable exception is a stretch of OR 99E that runs between Albany and Salem where OR 99E is cosigned along the highway California The 425 mile 684 km stretch between Wheeler Ridge and Red Bluff is signed as State Route 99 which makes it California s second longest state highway behind SR 1 However the newly enacted Historic U S Route 99 extends from Indio starting from Interstate 10 in the Coachella Valley all the way down the Imperial Valley to Calexico on the US Mexico border with Mexicali Baja California Mexico Major intersections editCalifornia 3 nbsp Fed 5 at U S Mexico border in Calexico 4 nbsp US 80 in El Centro 4 nbsp nbsp US 60 US 70 from Indio to Los Angeles nbsp nbsp US 91 US 395 in Colton nbsp US 101 in Los Angeles nbsp nbsp US 6 US 66 in Los Angeles nbsp US 6 at Newhall Pass nbsp US 466 from Bakersfield to Famoso nbsp US 399 in Greenfield 5 nbsp US 50 from Stockton to Sacramento nbsp nbsp US 99W US 99E in Sacramento nbsp US 40 from Davis to Sacramento US 99W and Sacramento to Roseville US 99E nbsp nbsp US 99W US 99E in Red Bluff nbsp US 299 in Redding nbsp US 97 in WeedOregon 6 nbsp US 199 in Grants Pass nbsp US 126 in Eugene nbsp nbsp US 99W US 99E in Junction City nbsp US 20 in Corvallis US 99W and Albany US 99E nbsp US 26 in Portland US 99W and 99E nbsp US 30 in Portland US 99W and 99E nbsp nbsp US 99W US 99E near PortlandWashington 7 nbsp US 830 from Vancouver to near Kelso nbsp nbsp US 101 US 410 in Olympia nbsp US 410 in Tacoma nbsp US 10 in Seattle nbsp US 2 in Everett nbsp Hwy 99 at Canada US border in BlaineSpecial routes editUS Route 99W California edit Main article U S Route 99 in California US 99W in California ran from Sacramento where it diverged from highway 99E to Red Bluff This section of the highway ran through towns such as Corning Orland Willows Artois Williams and Maxwell This section of the highway runs parallel with current day Interstate 5 8 US Route 99E California edit Main article U S Route 99 in California US 99E in California ran from Sacramento to Red Bluff and was partially concurrent to California State Route 36 This section of the highway ran through towns such as Chico Durham Richvale and Yuba City This section of the highway is currently used as part of California s State Route 99 8 US Route 99W Oregon edit nbsp U S Highway 99WLocationJunction City PortlandExisted1926 1972Main article Oregon Route 99WUS 99W in Oregon ran from Junction City where it diverged from highway 99E to Portland The US designation was redesignated as Oregon Route 99W in 1972 In 1994 Oregon 99W was truncated to Interstate 5 in Tigard at Exit 294 As such highways 99W and 99E no longer converge US Route 99E Oregon edit nbsp U S Highway 99ELocationJunction City PortlandExisted1926 1972Main article Oregon Route 99EUS 99E in Oregon ran from Junction City where it diverged from highway 99W to Portland but using a different route than highway 99W A segment between Albany and Salem is cosigned with Interstate 5 Like its western counterpart US 99E was changed to state highway 99E in 1972 Its current northern terminus is at Interstate 5 in Delta Park near the Portland Expo Center at Exit 307 Alternate routes in Washington edit nbsp nbsp U S Route 99 AlternateLocationBellinghamExisted1931 1964 nbsp nbsp U S Route 99 AlternateLocationBellingham Canadian borderExisted1952 1969Main articles Washington State Route 11 and Washington State Route 539 Two routes in Washington were designated US Route 99 Alternate both passed through parts of Bellingham and for about twelve years both had this designation at the same time In 1931 a new route for US 99 was constructed near the east side of Lake Samish similar to the route of today s Interstate 5 and US 99 was moved to this new road As a result the older 99 route past Bellingham Bay Chuckanut Drive was designated as US 99 Alternate Today this older route is Washington State Route 11 citation needed Beginning in 1952 the other US Route 99 Alternate began in downtown Bellingham and went due north along the Guide Meridian to Lynden and then to Canada 9 This highway was decommissioned in 1969 and is today known as Washington State Route 539 10 Both of these routes were renumbered in the 1960s when the state decommissioned all of US Route 99 and scrapped its entire highway numbering system to replace it with a new system citation needed Legacy editTravel on U S Route 99 is highlighted in a long poem by Gary Snyder Night Highway 99 11 The Sega videogame Sonic Advance 3 has a zone titled Route 99 but this could be coincidental citation needed Route 99 was planned to be featured in Pixar s Cars 3 as confirmed by Michael Wallis 12 However this never went through See also edit nbsp U S Roads portal nbsp California Roads portalU S Route 199 U S Route 299 Decommissioned U S Route 399 Decommissioned References edit Livingston Jill Maloof Kathryn Golden 2003 That Ribbon of Highway III Highway 99 through the Pacific Northwest Klamath River California Living Gold Press ISBN 0965137767 a b U S Route Numbering Subcommittee December 3 1971 U S Route Numbering Subcommittee Agenda Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials p 418 Retrieved October 29 2014 via Wikisource California State Highway Map 1963 Map California Department of Public Works Highway Division 1963 Retrieved July 27 2023 via David Rumsey Map Collection a b Map of US 99 at California Mexico border Map Archived from the original on November 25 2010 Retrieved October 10 2012 California State Highway Map 1961 Map California State Department of Public Works Highway Division August 19 1961 Retrieved March 12 2013 Official Highway Map of Oregon Map Oregon State Highway Department 1963 Retrieved July 27 2023 via Oregon State Library Washington State Department of Highways 1963 Washington State Highways Official Highway Map and Tourist Guide of the State of Washington Map Olympia Washington State Highway Commission Retrieved July 27 2023 via WSDOT Library Digital Collections a b Livingston Jill 2016 That Ribbon of Highway I Klamath River California Living Gold Press ISBN 9780965137737 Correspondence from Hal H Hale to W A Bugge July 25 1952 p 1 Retrieved March 9 2021 via AASHTO Route Numbering Archive U S Route Numbering Subcommittee June 24 1969 U S Route Numbering Subcommittee Agenda Showing Action Taken by the Executive Committee Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials p 382 Retrieved March 9 2021 via Wikisource Snyder Gary 2018 Night Highway 99 Mountains and Rivers Without End Berkeley California Counterpoint ISBN 9781582439006 Retrieved March 3 2021 via Google Books Sims Andrew Voice actor says Cars 3 in the works will feature California s Route 99 Hypable Retrieved June 6 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to U S Route 99 Museum of the Siskiyou Trail Information on the Ridge Route Ridge Route Preservation Organization History of Hwy 99 in North Los Angeles County Santa Clarita Valley Historical Society Photos text TV shows Clark s Travel Center and Route 99 Museum Indio California Finding Historic Route 99 Historic Highway 99 Association of California Highways of Washington State US 99 Virtual Tour of US 99 in Southern California Historic endpoints of US 99 Old Highway 99 City of Bellingham https www redding com story news 2017 10 21 signs recall days when old highway 99 busy route mountain gate 780505001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 99 amp oldid 1174932287 Washington, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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