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U.S. Route 67 in Illinois

U.S. Route 67 (US 67) is a component of the United States Numbered Highway System that connects Presidio, Texas, to Sabula, Iowa. In Illinois, it serves the western region of the state known as Forgottonia, named for the lack of regional transportation and infrastructure projects. The highway begins its path through the state by crossing the Clark Bridge over the Mississippi River from Missouri at Alton and heads northward through Jerseyville and Jacksonville before it crosses the Illinois River at Beardstown. The northern half of the route serves Macomb and Monmouth before it enters the Quad Cities. It leaves the state at Rock Island by crossing the Rock Island Centennial Bridge over the Mississippi River into Davenport, Iowa.

U.S. Route 67

US 67 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by IDOT
Length214.0 mi (344.4 km)
Existed1931[1]–present
Major junctions
South end US 67 in Alton
Major intersections
North end US 67 in Rock Island
Location
CountryUnited States
StateIllinois
CountiesMadison, Jersey, Greene, Scott, Morgan, Cass, Schuyler, McDonough, Warren, Mercer, Rock Island
Highway system
US 66 IL 68

The roads that would become US 67 were once a part of the Burlington Way and Alton–Jacksonville Air Line auto trails from the 1910s through the end of the 1920s. In 1918, Illinois voters approved a 48-route state highway system. Among the new routes was Route 3, which connected Morrison and Chester by way of the Quad Cities, Monmouth, Beardstown, Jacksonville, Alton, and East St. Louis. US 67 was created in 1926, but it did not extend into Illinois until 1931. That year, US 67 signs were applied to Route 3 from Alton to Rock Island. In 1952, the highway was rerouted between Medora and Murrayville; an alternate route was applied to the former routing until 1964, when the alternate was renumbered Illinois Route 267 (IL 267). Since the 1980s, a group called Corridor 67 has taken up the cause of advocating the widening of US 67 to a four-lane highway for the majority of its length. Widening the highway has been a popular project among politicians stumping in western Illinois. Although some piecemeal projects have taken place, a large percentage of the highway has not seen any upgrades despite there being other projects.

Route description edit

US 67 enters Illinois at Alton on the Clark Bridge over the Mississippi River. Upon landing, the highway has a T intersection with IL 143; US 67 turns to the northwest to follow the river upstream. The roadway and adjacent railway separate Alton's downtown area from its riverfront. It turns north, roughly perpendicular to the river and intersects IL 100. As the highway curves out of Alton and into Godfrey, it passes beneath IL 3 and IL 111, but there is no direct connection between the two roadways. A short while later, IL 111 joins US 67 and the two routes run together for several miles. IL 111 splits away and joins IL 267 while US 67 continues northward and takes over the four-lane roadway as IL 255 ends. It runs generally to the northwest on a divided highway until Delhi, where it reduces down to two lanes. It passes through the heart of Jerseyville and intersects both IL 109 and IL 16. It continues north-northwest through flat, rolling farmland until it reaches Carrollton.[2][3]

In Carrollton, US 67 meets IL 108 at the northeastern corner of the block on which the Greene County Courthouse sits. It then continues north and passes through Belltown and White Hall, in the latter of which, IL 106 splits off at a Y intersection and US 67 curves to the northeast. It then goes through Roodhouse and Manchester. A connection to Murrayville, aptly named Murrayville Road, provides a reminder of the former alignment of IL 267. The road then curves to the north and heads toward Jacksonville. There, three interchanges provide connections to differing parts of the city as US 67 does not enter the city limits. The first, with I-72 and US 36, connect South Jacksonville and eastern Jacksonville as well as Quincy and the state capital Springfield. The second, with Morton Avenue, a former alignment of US 36 and current Interstate business loop, provides access to central Jacksonville. The last, with IL 104, connects to northern and central Jacksonville. Past Jacksonville, US 67 is joined by IL 104.[2][3]

 
US 67 in McDonough County

US 67 and IL 104 head to the west-northwest though Chapin and Bethel. Shortly thereafter, the four-lane highway reduces down to two lanes once again. The highways are then joined by IL 100 right before IL 104 splits away to the west. US 67 and IL 100 head north, roughly parallel to the Illinois River until they reach Beardstown. There, they intersect IL 125 and then turn to the northwest to cross the river. On the other side, IL 100 splits off to the northeast, IL 103 heads west, and US 67 continues to the northwest through eastern Forgottonia. It meets US 24 in Rushville and IL 101 east of Littleton. It goes through Industry and connects with US 136 east of Macomb. These two routes head west into Macomb and split in the downtown area near Macomb station. From there, US 67 heads north past the campus of Western Illinois University and then becomes a four-lane highway before crossing the La Moine River. Farther north, it meets the present end of IL 336, at which the Chicago–Kansas City Expressway, signed IL 110, joins US 67.[2][3]

Still heading north, US 67 and IL 110 intersect IL 9 at Good Hope. They pass the small town of Swan Creek to the west and curve around Roseville. There, a business route passes through the downtown area; both the mainline and business route intersect IL 116. As the highway approaches Monmouth, the two routes are joined by US 34 from the west. The three routes head north along the western edge of Monmouth and they meet IL 164, which also joins. Carrying four routes, the highway curves to the east to run along the northern limits. There, US 67 splits away from the other three routes. Now on its own, US 67 heads north on a two-lane road. At the WarrenMercer county line, there is a Y intersection with IL 135. The two routes head east along the county line until US 67 curves north and IL 135 splits off to the east toward Alexis. At Viola, it meets IL 17. The highway passes Matherville to the east and through Preemption on its way toward the Quad Cities.[2][3]

 
US 67 as it enters Preemption

South of Oak Grove, it meets IL 94, which is signed as a shortcut to Muscatine, Iowa, via IL 192. As it enters Milan, US 67 meets the Milan Beltway, a short expressway that connects to John Deere Road in Moline. It later passes beneath I-280, but there are no connecting ramps. Access to the Interstate is provided by Airport Road. After briefly entering downtown Milan, the road turns to the northwest and crosses the Hennepin Canal and two channels of the Rock River separated by Vandruff Island. On the other side of the river is Rock Island and the western end of IL 5. It travels north through the city on 11th Street. At 5th Avenue, US 67 becomes a one-way couplet with 4th Avenue while continuing on 11th Street provides a connection to IL 92. The one-way streets continue through downtown Rock Island, but US 67 turns north-northwest onto 15th Street. At the foot of the Rock Island Centennial Bridge, IL 92 passes beneath the highway. There is no direct access to IL 92 from northbound US 67 or from westbound IL 92 to southbound US 67. The roadway crosses the Mississippi River into Davenport, Iowa.[2][3]

History edit

US 67 is an original U.S. Highway that was designated in 1926, though its northern end was at U.S. Route 61 at Fredericktown, Missouri. The road that would become US 67 was first improved as an auto trail called The Burlington Way, later the Mississippi Valley Highway. In 1918, Illinois voters approved a bond package that created a 48-route highway system. Most of the Mississippi Valley Highway became Route 3. US 67 replaced Route 3 north of Alton in 1926.

Auto trails edit

Prior to the numbered highway system in Illinois, the state was served by auto trails that were individually maintained by associations made up of people who solicited donations from people who lived along the routes. The northern half of the route that would become US 67 was served by the Burlington Way, which was renamed the Mississippi Valley Highway in 1919.[4] The Burlington Way had two branches in Illinois — one from Springfield to Gulfport, where it crossed into Iowa at Burlington, and one from Peoria to the Quad Cities. The two branches met near Monmouth. From Virginia to Alton, it followed the Great White Way and from Alton to East St. Louis, it followed the Alton Way.[5] In later years, the Alton–Jacksonville Air Line also connected Jacksonville and Alton, but farther to the east.[6]

State bond routes edit

 

Illinois Route 3

LocationMorrison to Chester
Existed1918–present
HistoryRoute north of East St. Louis became US 67 in 1930

In 1918, Illinois voters were given the opportunity to vote on a $60 million bond package (equivalent to $760 million in 2021[7]) for the creation of a 48-route state highway system. Route 3 was planned from Morrison to Chester by way of the Quad Cities, Monmouth, Beardstown, Jacksonville, Alton, and East St. Louis.[8] Early returns saw the measure pass 3-to-1 in favor in the Chicago area and nearly 6-to-1 in favor outside of Chicago. Officials said that surveying work could begin immediately and work on 4,800 miles (7,700 km) of paved highways could be finished in five or six years.[9] Residents of Woodson got together with members of the Mississippi Valley Highway association in late 1920 to petition the state to have Route 3 pass through their community rather than one-half mile (800 m) to the west.[10] By 1924, work on the initial system was nearly complete. Another $100 million bond package (equivalent to $1.27 billion in 2021[7]) was floated to voters that November and passed by a large majority.[11][12] The last sections of Route 3 to be paved were near Virginia in Cass County and between Ashland and Alexander in Morgan County.[13][14]

U.S. Highway origins edit

The American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO, now AASHTO) communicated to the director of the Illinois Department of Public Works and Buildings in early 1930 that they were going to extend US 67 north from Fredericktown to Davenport by way of Alton and most of Route 3 north of East St. Louis. The extended highway was to be slightly straighter than Route 3. Between Jacksonville and Virginia, Route 78 was a shorter route. The same could be said for Route 85 from Alexis to Rock Island. However, these short cuts were not paved upon US 67's designation, so Temporary US 67 signage was erected along Route 3 in those areas.[15]

 

Not long after it was designated, people began to call for changes to the routing between Alton and Jerseyville. There were numerous accidents caused by the hills and curves along Route 3.[16] It was suggested that the highway be rerouted through Godfrey and Delhi. The Jerseyville city council adopted a resolution proclaiming this in 1935 and sent a copy to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[17] It would not be until 1940 when the Delhi road was paved and US 67 shifted onto it.[18][19] The new road was immediately successful as it was drawing heavy truck traffic by the end of 1940.[20]

Flooding and ice floes on the Rock River in March 1937 wrought havoc on the two crossings at Vandruff Island between Milan and Rock Island. Men were standing at the feet of the closed bridges with poles trying to force chunks of ice underneath. Traffic was rerouted over the US 150 high bridge in Moline while the bridges were closed.[21] The bridges were reopened after the waters receded and the ice could pass beneath them.[22] On March 23, damage from the flood and ice became evident when the southern pier on the southern bridge began to fail. The bridge did not give way, but it did lean noticeably. The local highway supervisor noted that the pier rested on bedrock, so simply jacking up the bridge back into position would make it suitable for vehicular traffic.[23] The bridge reopened at 7:30 pm on April 3, but closed an hour later when it began to sag once again.[24] It reopened a few days later after the bridges beams were underpinned.[25] A $1.5-million project (equivalent to $13.7 million in 2021) to replace the four bridges that connected Rock Island and Milan was completed in November 1949.[26]

The highway was programmed to enter Illinois at Alton, but since it was AASHO policy then that no U.S. Highways crossed toll bridges, as the Clark Bridge was at the time, another temporary route was created so it would enter Illinois via the Free Bridge with US 66 and then north via Route 3 toward Alton.[15] In March 1939, the Illinois Division of Highways announced some changes to the routing of US 67. The U.S. Highway would finally enter Illinois at Alton. The temporary routing from downtown St. Louis was to become US 67 Alternate.[27] A few months later, on the eleventh anniversary of the opening of the Lewis Bridge and Clark Bridge, officials from St. Louis County, Missouri, announced that $450,000 of bonds (equivalent to $6.97 million in 2021) had been paid off and only a small amount of debt remained before the bridges would become a toll-free crossing.[28]

Routing changes edit

Another US 67 Alternate was created in 1952 as a result of the construction of a 32-mile-long (51 km), straighter, and modern highway being built between Medora and Murrayville. State highway officials appealed to AASHO to reroute US 67 along IL 111 between the Y intersection at Godfrey to Medora and thence on the new highway to Murrayville. They wanted to reduce through traffic in Jerseyville, Carrollton, and White Hall and the new highway only went through the downtown area of Greenfield. The U.S. Route Numbering Committee approved both the new route and the alternate route on July 17.[29] More route straightening occurred between Beardstown and Rushville. A new high bridge was opened in 1955 that replaced a 67-year-old wagon swing bridge.[30] A contract to pave a direct route between the two cities was let in 1959.[31] The new routing replaced a longer meandering route through Frederick, Pleasant View, and downtown Rushville. It was approved by AASHO by the end of 1960.[32] In downtown Jacksonville, the mayor wanted to reduce the number of heavy trucks, especially those hauling gasoline or liquid propane, driving through the central business district. In the state's application to AASHO, they wanted to completely reroute the highway between Beardstown and Jacksonville. Instead of heading north through Virginia, the highway would then travel west along West Morton Road, which carried US 36 and US 54, then to the northwest over IL 104, and then IL 100 north to Beardstown. The application was approved and the state placed the new routing in effect on December 13, 1967.[33]

The two alternate routes of US 67 in Illinois would not last through the mid-1960s. Citing improvements to US 67 and US 67 Bypass in the St. Louis area, Illinois highway officials felt the alternate route utilizing the MacArthur Bridge simply was no longer necessary. They would remumber the alternate route IL 3 upon approval.[34] This change was approved by AASHO on June 19, 1963.[35] The next year, officials sought to remove the other alternate route north of Godfrey because it was causing confusion among motorists.[36] Instead, they wanted to number the western route IL 267. This change received assent from AASHO on December 6, 1964.[37] Signage on the former alternate route was changed around April 1, 1965.[38]

Clark Bridge edit

 
The Clark Bridge as seen from the Alton marina

Calls to replace the Clark Bridge at Alton began in the 1960s. The mayor of Alton spoke to the state highway study commission and asked them to pursue a new bridge as the old bridge created traffic bottlenecks in his city.[39] The mayor also showed frustration in the lack of progress with the state, especially after an Illinois River bridge in Calhoun County was approved. At the time, the population of Calhoun County was lower than the daily number of vehicles using the Clark Bridge.[40] The bridge was closed for extensive repairs during the latter half of 1975. Approximately 1,500 feet (460 m) of the bridge's deck was replaced.[41] IDOT announced in November 1980 that engineering work would soon begin on the new bridge.[42] A report in 1982 listed four locations, all of which were within 6,500 feet (2,000 m) of the original bridge, for consideration by the Illinois and Missouri departments of transportation.[43] In April 1984, two semi trucks became wedged on the narrow bridge when they tried to pass by one another.[44] Deteriorating steel floor beams led to an embargo on heavy truck traffic and a reduction of weight limits from 40 to 20 short tons (36 to 18 long tons; 36,000 to 18,000 kg) for semi trucks and 15 short tons (13 long tons; 14,000 kg) for dump trucks in late 1990.[45]

Design work on the new bridge began in 1985.[46] In November 1989, the federal government released $26.4 million of discretionary funds for the construction of a $92-million, four-lane replacement (equivalent to $51 million and $178 million, respectively, in 2021[7]).[47] By the end of 1991, the federal government had contributed $70 million to the project (equivalent to $126 million in 2021[7]).[48] Engineers from IDOT decided on a cable-stayed bridge to replace the old truss bridge; the first of its kind in Greater St. Louis.[49] Construction on the piers began in 1991 and progressed without incident.[46] The last piece of framing was installed on May 7, 1993. Crews anticipated that the bridge would open around December 1, 1993.[50] The Great Flood of 1993 did not damage the bridge and construction was only delayed for two months when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers closed the river to barge traffic.[46] The new Clark Bridge opened on January 6, 1994.[51]

Corridor 67 edit

Beginning in 1989, a group of citizens from the western Illinois counties that comprise Forgottonia organized a group to advocate expanding US 67 to become a limited-access highway from Alton to the Quad Cities. The Corridor 67 committee expected the cost of the project to be $700 million (equivalent to $1.35 billion in 2021[7])[52] At the time, the state secretary of transportation noted it was unlikely there would be any funds for that highway in the upcoming five-year plan as federal highway dollars were already stretched.[53] Illinois Secretary of State, and later governor, Jim Edgar expressed support for the Corridor 67 group's aspirations and hoped the route would be selected for the Avenue of the Saints highway.[54] In order to sweeten their proposal to attract the Avenue of the Saints, IDOT officials offered to increase their share of construction costs from 20 to 30 percent.[55]

Among politicians, the Avenue of the Saints project was popular. Both major political party candidates in the 1992 U.S. Senate election for Illinois supported funding the project. The Democratic Party candidate and eventual winner, Carol Moseley Braun, even received reassurance from Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York, who at the time was the chair of the senate committee that oversees federal highway funding. Ultimately, the Avenue of the Saints highway was not routed through Illinois, but leaders from the Corridor 67 group hoped there could be a second Saints route through the state.[56] By 1994, Corridor 67 formed a political action committee, PAC 67, with the express intent of bringing attention to their project.[57] The highway received some renewed interest during the 1998 election cycle. Gubernatorial candidate and eventual winner George Ryan suggested moving fuel taxes back into the transportation budget in order to fund the US 67 project.[58]

 
The former routing of US 67 through Roseville

Despite, in their opinion, there never seeming to be any available funds to widen US 67 to four lanes, members of the Corridor 67 group remained optimistic. Engineers chose their preferred alignment, along IL 267 from Alton to Jacksonville, and then along the present alignment of US 67 north to the Quad Cities. Some work was completed by the end of the 1990s: widening between Monmouth and Macomb and a western bypass of Jacksonville.[59] On July 5, 2001, IDOT announced that crews would swap route markers on US 67 and IL 267 beginning July 9.[60] The change was made to apply the US 67 designation to the entire Corridor 67 route before major projects began rather than after.[61] The renumbering came to the surprise of residents and business owners along both routes who felt they were not given enough notice of the change. IDOT officials disagreed and said that due diligence was done.[62]

Throughout the 2000s decade, US 67 was widened further. A bypass was built around Roseville, which completed the four-lane highway between Macomb and Monmouth.[63][64] A new section from the former IL 267 highway near Murrayville connected to the western bypass of Jacksonville.[64][65] While working south of Jerseyville in July 2010, remains of a 1400-year-old Native American village was discovered. Archeologists unearthed storage pits and floors made of flagstone. Artifact excavation was completed about a month later.[66]

The Corridor 67 project is ongoing and is being completed as funds are available. In 2003, the FHWA and IDOT signed off on plans to widen US 67 between Jacksonville and Macomb. Those plans included a new $62-million crossing of the Illinois River at Beardstown (equivalent to $89 million in 2021[7]) as well as the construction of interchanges at IL 104 near Meredosia, 6th Street in Beardstown, IL 100/IL 103 across the river from Beardstown, and US 24 at Rushville.[67] Construction on the new bridge is scheduled to begin in 2023 and be completed in 2026.[68]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[2]kmExitDestinationsNotes
Mississippi River0.00.0 
 
US 67 south – St. Louis
Continuation into Missouri
Clark Bridge; Missouri–Illinois state line
MadisonAlton0.60.97 
 
 
 
 
 
IL 143 east / Great River Road south / Meeting of the Great Rivers south to IL 140 – Wood River
Southern end of Great River Road and Meeting of the Great Rivers overlaps
1.42.3 
 
 
 
IL 100 north (Broadway) / Great River Road north / Meeting of the Great Rivers north – Grafton, Pere Marquette State Park
Northern end of Great River Road and Meeting of the Great Rivers overlaps
Godfrey5.08.0 
 
 
 
IL 111 south to IL 3 – Alton, Bethalto
Southern end of IL 111 overlap
7.411.9 
 
 
 
 
 
IL 111 north / IL 267 north (Lars Hoffmann Crossing) to IL 255 – Brighton
Northern end of IL 111 overlap
7.912.7 
 
 
 
IL 255 south to I-270
Southbound exit and northbound entrance only
JerseyJerseyville20.032.2 
 
IL 109 south – Grafton
20.232.5  IL 16 (Carpenter Street)
GreeneCarrollton34.054.7  IL 108 (Main Street)
White Hall44.070.8 
 
IL 106 north – Winchester
Scott
No major junctions
MorganMurrayville PrecinctMurrayville Road – MurrayvilleFormer IL 267
Lynnville Precinct62.4100.4   I-72 / US 36 – Springfield, Quincy
 
 
I-72 BL begins
Southern end of I-72 BL overlap
Jacksonville65.1104.8 
 
I-72 BL east (Morton Avenue)
Northern end of I-72 BL overlap
67.1108.0 
 
 
 
 
IL 104 east to IL 78 north – Jacksonville
Southern end of IL 104 overlap
Chapin Precinct71.5115.1Concord, Arenzville (CR 7)
Meredosia Precinct79.8128.4 
 
IL 100 south / Illinois River Road south – Bluffs
Southern end of IL 100 and Illinois River Road overlaps
80.7129.9 
 
IL 104 west – Meredosia, Quincy
Northern end of IL 104 overlap; future interchange
CassBeardstown94.1151.4 
 
IL 125 east – Virginia
6th StreetFuture interchange
Illinois River95.0152.9Beardstown Bridge
SchuylerBainbridge Township96.1154.7 
 
IL 100 north / Illinois River Road north – Havana
 
 
IL 103 west – Mount Sterling
Northern end of IL 100 and Illinois River Road overlaps; future interchange
Rushville105.0169.0  US 24 (Clinton Street) – Rushville, Mount SterlingFuture interchange
Littleton Township113.3182.3 
 
IL 101 west – Littleton, Augusta
McDonoughScotland Township129.4208.2 
 
US 136 east – Adair
Southern end of US 136 overlap
Macomb132.4213.1 
 
US 136 west – Carthage
Northern end of US 136 overlap
EmmetMacomb
township line
 
 
 
 
 
IL 110 (CKC) west / IL 336 south – Carthage
Southern end of IL 110 (CKC) overlap
Good Hope138.6223.1  IL 9 – Bushnell, LaHarpe
WarrenPoint PleasantSwan
township line
149.9241.2 
 
 
US 67 Bus. north – Roseville
Ellison Township151.4243.7  IL 116 – Roseville, Media
Roseville Township153.8247.5 
 
 
US 67 Bus. south – Roseville
LenoxMonmouth
township line
162.8262.0 
 
US 34 east / S. Main Street – Burlington
Southern end of US 34 overlap
Monmouth164.3264.4 
 
IL 164 west (Broadway) – Oquawka
Southern end of IL 164 overlap
165.8266.8 
 
 
 
 
 
 
US 34 east / IL 110 (CKC) east / IL 164 east – Galesburg
Northern end of US 34, IL 110 (CKC), and IL 164 overlaps
WarrenMercer
county line
Spring GroveSuez
township line
175.8282.9 
 
IL 135 west – Little York
Southern end of IL 135 overlap
177.5285.7 
 
IL 135 east – Alexis
Northern end of IL 135 overlap
MercerViola187.0300.9  IL 17 – New Windsor, Aledo
Rock IslandBowling Township200.3322.4 
 
 
 
IL 94 west to IL 192 – Taylor Ridge, Muscatine, Iowa
MilanMilan Beltway (CR 78) / 92nd Ave W.
204.6329.3 
 
  Airport Road to I-280 – Quad City Airport
Rock Island206.0331.5 
 
IL 5 east (46th Avenue) – Black Hawk State Historic Site
 
 
11th Street to IL 92
213.8344.1 
 
To IL 92 (Centennial Expressway) / 2nd Avenue
Southbound exit and northbound entrance only
Mississippi River214.0344.4Rock Island Centennial Bridge; Illinois–Iowa state line
 
 
US 67 north – Davenport
Continuation into Iowa
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Related routes edit

References edit

  1. ^ Illinois Secretary of State (1931). Official Illinois Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:950,000 and c. 1:1,110,000]. Springfield: Illinois Secretary of State – via Illinois Digital Archives.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Google (January 30, 2022). "U.S. Route 67 in Illinois" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 30, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e Illinois Department of Transportation (2015). Illinois Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map) (2015–2016 ed.). [1:762,500]. Springfield: Illinois Department of Transportation. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
  4. ^ "'Burlington Way' is now 'Mississippi Valley' Road". American Motorist. Vol. XI, no. 11. December 1, 1919. p. 34. Retrieved January 28, 2018 – via Google Books.  
  5. ^ Illinois State Highway Department (1917). Map Showing Marked Through Routes in Illinois (Map). Scale not given. Springfield: Illinois State Highway Department – via Illinois Digital Archives.
  6. ^ Illinois Secretary of State (1924). Illinois Official Auto Trails Map (Map). [c. 1:950,000 and c. 1:1,110,000]. Springfield: Illinois Secretary of State – via Illinois Digital Archives.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Johnston, Louis; Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved January 1, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series.
  8. ^ "Election Notice". Dixon Evening Telegraph. Dixon, Illinois. October 29, 1918. p. 2. Retrieved February 3, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  9. ^ "Illinois lifted out of the mud; link wins, too". Chicago Tribune. November 6, 1918. p. 1. Retrieved February 3, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  10. ^ "Draw petition in efforts to alter highway". The Jacksonville Daily Journal. Jacksonville, Illinois. December 10, 1920. p. 8. Retrieved February 3, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ "$100,000,000 bond issue for great Illinois highway system paid by auto fees". Journal Gazette. Mattoon, Illinois. October 20, 1924. p. 8. Retrieved February 3, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  12. ^ Wrone, David R. (1965). "Illinois Pulls out of the Mud". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. University of Illinois Press. 58 (1): 54–76. JSTOR 40190426. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  13. ^ Illinois Secretary of State; Rand McNally (1927). Illinois Official Auto Road Map (Map). [c. 1:950,000 and c. 1:1,110,000]. Springfield: Illinois Secretary of State. Retrieved February 3, 2022 – via Illinois Digital Archives.
  14. ^ Illinois Secretary of State; H.M. Gousha (1928). Illinois Official Auto Road Map (Map). [c. 1:950,000 and c. 1:1,110,000]. Springfield: Illinois Secretary of State. Retrieved February 3, 2022 – via Illinois Digital Archives.
  15. ^ a b "Alton placed on Federal Highway 67; U.S. official body approves routing". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. March 28, 1930. p. 1. Retrieved February 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  16. ^ "Veteran editor urges change in U.S. Highway 67". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. April 17, 1930. p. 11. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  17. ^ "Ask federal road shift to be made Alton–Jerseyville". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. September 19, 1935. p. 8. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  18. ^ "Madison County jobs are among those to be bid on". Belleville Daily Advocate. Belleville, Illinois. AP. January 11, 1940. p. 2. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  19. ^ "New road map now ready for distribution". The Belleville News-Democrat. Belleville, Illinois. March 20, 1941. p. 16. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  20. ^ "Already a major highway". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. October 9, 1940. p. 3. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  21. ^ "Gorge ice surges loose in Rock River, closing traffic across bridges into Milan". The Rock Island Argus. Rock Island, Illinois. March 6, 1937. pp. 1–2. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  22. ^ "Flood threatens Burlington track east of Barstow". The Dispatch. Moline, Illinois. March 9, 1937. pp. 1, 13. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  23. ^ "Span across southernmost branch of river settling as masonry at pier crumbles". The Rock Island Argus. Rock Island, Illinois. March 24, 1937. pp. 1–2. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  24. ^ "Bridge to Milan again closed as west end drops". The Democrat and Leader. Davenport, Iowa. April 4, 1937. p. 27. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  25. ^ "Span Over Rock River Is Opened to All Traffic". The Rock Island Argus. April 7, 1937. p. 7. Retrieved February 28, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.  
  26. ^ "New 4-Lane Bridges Over Rock River Finished in '49 at Cost of $1,500,000". The Dispatch. December 31, 1949. p. 31. Retrieved February 28, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.  
  27. ^ "Changes made in numbers of state routes". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. March 25, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved February 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  28. ^ "Anniversary of Lewis & Clark Bridges Sunday". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. July 15, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved February 4, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  29. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (1952). [Report of the U.S. Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee] (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  30. ^ "Beardstown to celebrate opening of new highway bridge Tuesday". Section 2. The Jacksonville Daily Journal. Jacksonville, Illinois. September 11, 1955. p. 3. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  31. ^ Foust, Hal (December 12, 1958). "U.S. 66 Springfield bypass to start in '59". Chicago Tribune. p. 15. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  32. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (November 26, 1960). "U.S. Route Numbering Committee Agenda" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  33. ^ "Beardstown-J'ville route change set for December 13". Journal-Courier. Jacksonville, Illinois. November 26, 1967. p. 36. Retrieved February 6, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  34. ^ Staff, Virden E. (May 8, 1963). An Application from the State Highway Department of Illinois for the Elimination of an Alternate U.S. Route 67 (Report).
  35. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (June 19, 1963). "U.S. Route Numbering Committee Agenda" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. Retrieved February 5, 2022 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  36. ^ Staff, Virden E. (October 7, 1964). An Application from the State Highway Department of Illinois for the Elimination of an Alternate U.S. Route 67 (Report).
  37. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (December 6, 1964). "U.S. Route Numbering Committee Agenda Showing Action Taken by AASHO Executive Committee" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. Retrieved February 6, 2022 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  38. ^ "Route 67A becomes 267". Journal-Courier. Jacksonville, Illinois. March 21, 1965. p. 9. Retrieved February 6, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  39. ^ "Commission hears traffic problems". The Belleville News-Democrat. Belleville, Illinois. November 14, 1968. p. 12. Retrieved February 7, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  40. ^ "Wiseman questions bridge plan stall". Alton Evening Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. July 3, 1967. p. 1. Retrieved May 8, 2022.
  41. ^ "Clark span repairs near end". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. October 30, 1975. p. 9C. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  42. ^ "Work to begin soon on bridge project". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. November 20, 1980. p. 3A. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  43. ^ Koman, Karen (September 9, 1982). "4 sites studied for new bridge over Mississippi". St. Charles Post. St. Louis. p. 1. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  44. ^ LaRouche, Robert (April 3, 1984). "Trapped". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 3A. Retrieved May 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  45. ^ "Truck traffic is restricted across deteriorating bridge". The Belleville News-Democrat. Belleville, Illinois. September 29, 1990. p. 9. Retrieved February 7, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  46. ^ a b c Goodyear, David; Salamie, Ralph (August 1994). "The new Clark Bridge: saddle-draped cables". Civil Engineering. Vol. 64, no. 8. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers. pp. 46–47. ISSN 0885-7024. ProQuest 228482554. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via ProQuest.  
  47. ^ Kelly, Robert (November 11, 1989). "Fanfare greets Clark Bridge funds". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 3A. Retrieved May 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  48. ^ Koenig, Robert L (December 19, 1991). "U.S. releases more money for new Clark Bridge at Alton". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 3A. Retrieved May 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  49. ^ Gauen, Pat (June 27, 1991). "Replacement span at Alton is treat for bridge lover". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. pp. I1–I2. Retrieved May 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  50. ^ Gauen, Pat (May 7, 1993). "Clark Bridge gets 'closure piece' today". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 1. Retrieved May 8, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  51. ^ De Bruce, Orlando (January 6, 1994). "Clark Bridge opens today". The Belleville News-Democrat. Belleville, Illinois. p. 1. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  52. ^ Frank, Cheryl (February 10, 1989). "Group wants state to revamp U.S. 67". Herald & Review. Decatur, Illinois. p. A4. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  53. ^ Frank, Cheryl (February 17, 1989). "Highway upgrade hopes dim". Herald & Review. Decatur, Illinois. p. A5. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  54. ^ "Edgar endorses marching 'Saints' route along U.S. 67". The Dispatch. Moline, Illinois. May 30, 1990. p. D2. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  55. ^ Felker, Edward (June 8, 1990). "State offers incentive for Saints route". The Rock Island Argus. Rock Island, Illinois. p. 1. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  56. ^ Loretz, Carol (October 10, 1992). "Key senator says 'Saints' route may include Illinois". The Rock Island Argus. Rock Island, Illinois. p. B5. Retrieved May 12, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  57. ^ Felker, Edward (November 8, 1994). "Q-C PACs make presents [sic] felt in '94 campaign". The Dispatch. Moline, Illinois. p. A6. Retrieved May 12, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  58. ^ Norton, Marcy (July 15, 1998). "Ryan, Baker line up for 4-lane U.S. 67". The Dispatch. Moline, Illinois. p. C4. Retrieved May 12, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  59. ^ Hillig, Terry (April 5, 1999). "Road's prospects are rosy, says leader of superhighway task force". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. pp. AA1–AA7. Retrieved May 13, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  60. ^ (Press release). Springfield: Illinois Department of Transportation. July 5, 2001. Archived from the original on January 11, 2002. Retrieved May 10, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  61. ^ Gillig, Terry (July 30, 2001). "New changes in numbers of state highways is drawing some criticism". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. MC7. Retrieved May 13, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  62. ^ Pranaitis, Laura (July 26, 2001). "Road to confusion". Alton Telegraph. Alton, Illinois. Retrieved May 10, 2022 – via Newspaperarchive.com.  
  63. ^ Illinois Department of Transportation (2001). Illinois Highway Map (Map) (2001–2002 ed.). [1:762,500]. Springfield: Illinois Department of Transportation. § F3. Retrieved November 24, 2022 – via Illinois Digital Archives.
  64. ^ a b Illinois Department of Transportation (2003). Illinois Highway Map (Map) (2003–2004 ed.). [1:762,500]. Springfield: Illinois Department of Transportation. § F3. Retrieved November 24, 2022 – via Illinois Digital Archives.
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  66. ^ Borman, Maggie (July 17, 2010). "Dig uncovers ancient settlement". Southern Illinoisan. Carbondale, Illinois. Associated Press. p. 4B. Retrieved May 9, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  67. ^ Stoner, Norman R. (March 6, 2003). U.S. 67 (FAP 310) Jacksonville to Macomb (PDF) (Report). Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
  68. ^ Dawson, Dave (July 6, 2022). "Beardstown readies for new bridge over Illinois River". Jacksonville Journal-Courier. Retrieved March 19, 2023.

External links edit

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  U.S. Route 67
Previous state:
Missouri
Illinois Next state:
Iowa

route, illinois, this, article, about, section, entire, route, route, route, component, united, states, numbered, highway, system, that, connects, presidio, texas, sabula, iowa, illinois, serves, western, region, state, known, forgottonia, named, lack, regiona. This article is about the section of U S Route 67 in Illinois For the entire route see U S Route 67 U S Route 67 US 67 is a component of the United States Numbered Highway System that connects Presidio Texas to Sabula Iowa In Illinois it serves the western region of the state known as Forgottonia named for the lack of regional transportation and infrastructure projects The highway begins its path through the state by crossing the Clark Bridge over the Mississippi River from Missouri at Alton and heads northward through Jerseyville and Jacksonville before it crosses the Illinois River at Beardstown The northern half of the route serves Macomb and Monmouth before it enters the Quad Cities It leaves the state at Rock Island by crossing the Rock Island Centennial Bridge over the Mississippi River into Davenport Iowa U S Route 67US 67 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by IDOTLength214 0 mi 344 4 km Existed1931 1 presentMajor junctionsSouth endUS 67 in AltonMajor intersectionsI 72 US 36 in Jacksonville US 24 in Rushville US 136 in Macomb US 34 IL 110 CKC in MonmouthNorth endUS 67 in Rock IslandLocationCountryUnited StatesStateIllinoisCountiesMadison Jersey Greene Scott Morgan Cass Schuyler McDonough Warren Mercer Rock IslandHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway SystemList Special DividedIllinois State Highway SystemInterstate US State Tollways Scenic US 66 IL 68The roads that would become US 67 were once a part of the Burlington Way and Alton Jacksonville Air Line auto trails from the 1910s through the end of the 1920s In 1918 Illinois voters approved a 48 route state highway system Among the new routes was Route 3 which connected Morrison and Chester by way of the Quad Cities Monmouth Beardstown Jacksonville Alton and East St Louis US 67 was created in 1926 but it did not extend into Illinois until 1931 That year US 67 signs were applied to Route 3 from Alton to Rock Island In 1952 the highway was rerouted between Medora and Murrayville an alternate route was applied to the former routing until 1964 when the alternate was renumbered Illinois Route 267 IL 267 Since the 1980s a group called Corridor 67 has taken up the cause of advocating the widening of US 67 to a four lane highway for the majority of its length Widening the highway has been a popular project among politicians stumping in western Illinois Although some piecemeal projects have taken place a large percentage of the highway has not seen any upgrades despite there being other projects Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 Auto trails 2 2 State bond routes 2 3 U S Highway origins 2 4 Routing changes 2 5 Clark Bridge 2 6 Corridor 67 3 Major intersections 4 Related routes 5 References 6 External linksRoute description editUS 67 enters Illinois at Alton on the Clark Bridge over the Mississippi River Upon landing the highway has a T intersection with IL 143 US 67 turns to the northwest to follow the river upstream The roadway and adjacent railway separate Alton s downtown area from its riverfront It turns north roughly perpendicular to the river and intersects IL 100 As the highway curves out of Alton and into Godfrey it passes beneath IL 3 and IL 111 but there is no direct connection between the two roadways A short while later IL 111 joins US 67 and the two routes run together for several miles IL 111 splits away and joins IL 267 while US 67 continues northward and takes over the four lane roadway as IL 255 ends It runs generally to the northwest on a divided highway until Delhi where it reduces down to two lanes It passes through the heart of Jerseyville and intersects both IL 109 and IL 16 It continues north northwest through flat rolling farmland until it reaches Carrollton 2 3 In Carrollton US 67 meets IL 108 at the northeastern corner of the block on which the Greene County Courthouse sits It then continues north and passes through Belltown and White Hall in the latter of which IL 106 splits off at a Y intersection and US 67 curves to the northeast It then goes through Roodhouse and Manchester A connection to Murrayville aptly named Murrayville Road provides a reminder of the former alignment of IL 267 The road then curves to the north and heads toward Jacksonville There three interchanges provide connections to differing parts of the city as US 67 does not enter the city limits The first with I 72 and US 36 connect South Jacksonville and eastern Jacksonville as well as Quincy and the state capital Springfield The second with Morton Avenue a former alignment of US 36 and current Interstate business loop provides access to central Jacksonville The last with IL 104 connects to northern and central Jacksonville Past Jacksonville US 67 is joined by IL 104 2 3 nbsp US 67 in McDonough CountyUS 67 and IL 104 head to the west northwest though Chapin and Bethel Shortly thereafter the four lane highway reduces down to two lanes once again The highways are then joined by IL 100 right before IL 104 splits away to the west US 67 and IL 100 head north roughly parallel to the Illinois River until they reach Beardstown There they intersect IL 125 and then turn to the northwest to cross the river On the other side IL 100 splits off to the northeast IL 103 heads west and US 67 continues to the northwest through eastern Forgottonia It meets US 24 in Rushville and IL 101 east of Littleton It goes through Industry and connects with US 136 east of Macomb These two routes head west into Macomb and split in the downtown area near Macomb station From there US 67 heads north past the campus of Western Illinois University and then becomes a four lane highway before crossing the La Moine River Farther north it meets the present end of IL 336 at which the Chicago Kansas City Expressway signed IL 110 joins US 67 2 3 Still heading north US 67 and IL 110 intersect IL 9 at Good Hope They pass the small town of Swan Creek to the west and curve around Roseville There a business route passes through the downtown area both the mainline and business route intersect IL 116 As the highway approaches Monmouth the two routes are joined by US 34 from the west The three routes head north along the western edge of Monmouth and they meet IL 164 which also joins Carrying four routes the highway curves to the east to run along the northern limits There US 67 splits away from the other three routes Now on its own US 67 heads north on a two lane road At the Warren Mercer county line there is a Y intersection with IL 135 The two routes head east along the county line until US 67 curves north and IL 135 splits off to the east toward Alexis At Viola it meets IL 17 The highway passes Matherville to the east and through Preemption on its way toward the Quad Cities 2 3 nbsp US 67 as it enters PreemptionSouth of Oak Grove it meets IL 94 which is signed as a shortcut to Muscatine Iowa via IL 192 As it enters Milan US 67 meets the Milan Beltway a short expressway that connects to John Deere Road in Moline It later passes beneath I 280 but there are no connecting ramps Access to the Interstate is provided by Airport Road After briefly entering downtown Milan the road turns to the northwest and crosses the Hennepin Canal and two channels of the Rock River separated by Vandruff Island On the other side of the river is Rock Island and the western end of IL 5 It travels north through the city on 11th Street At 5th Avenue US 67 becomes a one way couplet with 4th Avenue while continuing on 11th Street provides a connection to IL 92 The one way streets continue through downtown Rock Island but US 67 turns north northwest onto 15th Street At the foot of the Rock Island Centennial Bridge IL 92 passes beneath the highway There is no direct access to IL 92 from northbound US 67 or from westbound IL 92 to southbound US 67 The roadway crosses the Mississippi River into Davenport Iowa 2 3 History editUS 67 is an original U S Highway that was designated in 1926 though its northern end was at U S Route 61 at Fredericktown Missouri The road that would become US 67 was first improved as an auto trail called The Burlington Way later the Mississippi Valley Highway In 1918 Illinois voters approved a bond package that created a 48 route highway system Most of the Mississippi Valley Highway became Route 3 US 67 replaced Route 3 north of Alton in 1926 Auto trails edit Further information U S Route 61 in Iowa Burlington Way Prior to the numbered highway system in Illinois the state was served by auto trails that were individually maintained by associations made up of people who solicited donations from people who lived along the routes The northern half of the route that would become US 67 was served by the Burlington Way which was renamed the Mississippi Valley Highway in 1919 4 The Burlington Way had two branches in Illinois one from Springfield to Gulfport where it crossed into Iowa at Burlington and one from Peoria to the Quad Cities The two branches met near Monmouth From Virginia to Alton it followed the Great White Way and from Alton to East St Louis it followed the Alton Way 5 In later years the Alton Jacksonville Air Line also connected Jacksonville and Alton but farther to the east 6 State bond routes edit nbsp Illinois Route 3LocationMorrison to ChesterExisted1918 presentHistoryRoute north of East St Louis became US 67 in 1930Further information Illinois Route 3 In 1918 Illinois voters were given the opportunity to vote on a 60 million bond package equivalent to 760 million in 2021 7 for the creation of a 48 route state highway system Route 3 was planned from Morrison to Chester by way of the Quad Cities Monmouth Beardstown Jacksonville Alton and East St Louis 8 Early returns saw the measure pass 3 to 1 in favor in the Chicago area and nearly 6 to 1 in favor outside of Chicago Officials said that surveying work could begin immediately and work on 4 800 miles 7 700 km of paved highways could be finished in five or six years 9 Residents of Woodson got together with members of the Mississippi Valley Highway association in late 1920 to petition the state to have Route 3 pass through their community rather than one half mile 800 m to the west 10 By 1924 work on the initial system was nearly complete Another 100 million bond package equivalent to 1 27 billion in 2021 7 was floated to voters that November and passed by a large majority 11 12 The last sections of Route 3 to be paved were near Virginia in Cass County and between Ashland and Alexander in Morgan County 13 14 U S Highway origins edit The American Association of State Highway Officials AASHO now AASHTO communicated to the director of the Illinois Department of Public Works and Buildings in early 1930 that they were going to extend US 67 north from Fredericktown to Davenport by way of Alton and most of Route 3 north of East St Louis The extended highway was to be slightly straighter than Route 3 Between Jacksonville and Virginia Route 78 was a shorter route The same could be said for Route 85 from Alexis to Rock Island However these short cuts were not paved upon US 67 s designation so Temporary US 67 signage was erected along Route 3 in those areas 15 nbsp Not long after it was designated people began to call for changes to the routing between Alton and Jerseyville There were numerous accidents caused by the hills and curves along Route 3 16 It was suggested that the highway be rerouted through Godfrey and Delhi The Jerseyville city council adopted a resolution proclaiming this in 1935 and sent a copy to President Franklin D Roosevelt 17 It would not be until 1940 when the Delhi road was paved and US 67 shifted onto it 18 19 The new road was immediately successful as it was drawing heavy truck traffic by the end of 1940 20 Flooding and ice floes on the Rock River in March 1937 wrought havoc on the two crossings at Vandruff Island between Milan and Rock Island Men were standing at the feet of the closed bridges with poles trying to force chunks of ice underneath Traffic was rerouted over the US 150 high bridge in Moline while the bridges were closed 21 The bridges were reopened after the waters receded and the ice could pass beneath them 22 On March 23 damage from the flood and ice became evident when the southern pier on the southern bridge began to fail The bridge did not give way but it did lean noticeably The local highway supervisor noted that the pier rested on bedrock so simply jacking up the bridge back into position would make it suitable for vehicular traffic 23 The bridge reopened at 7 30 pm on April 3 but closed an hour later when it began to sag once again 24 It reopened a few days later after the bridges beams were underpinned 25 A 1 5 million project equivalent to 13 7 million in 2021 to replace the four bridges that connected Rock Island and Milan was completed in November 1949 26 The highway was programmed to enter Illinois at Alton but since it was AASHO policy then that no U S Highways crossed toll bridges as the Clark Bridge was at the time another temporary route was created so it would enter Illinois via the Free Bridge with US 66 and then north via Route 3 toward Alton 15 In March 1939 the Illinois Division of Highways announced some changes to the routing of US 67 The U S Highway would finally enter Illinois at Alton The temporary routing from downtown St Louis was to become US 67 Alternate 27 A few months later on the eleventh anniversary of the opening of the Lewis Bridge and Clark Bridge officials from St Louis County Missouri announced that 450 000 of bonds equivalent to 6 97 million in 2021 had been paid off and only a small amount of debt remained before the bridges would become a toll free crossing 28 Routing changes edit Another US 67 Alternate was created in 1952 as a result of the construction of a 32 mile long 51 km straighter and modern highway being built between Medora and Murrayville State highway officials appealed to AASHO to reroute US 67 along IL 111 between the Y intersection at Godfrey to Medora and thence on the new highway to Murrayville They wanted to reduce through traffic in Jerseyville Carrollton and White Hall and the new highway only went through the downtown area of Greenfield The U S Route Numbering Committee approved both the new route and the alternate route on July 17 29 More route straightening occurred between Beardstown and Rushville A new high bridge was opened in 1955 that replaced a 67 year old wagon swing bridge 30 A contract to pave a direct route between the two cities was let in 1959 31 The new routing replaced a longer meandering route through Frederick Pleasant View and downtown Rushville It was approved by AASHO by the end of 1960 32 In downtown Jacksonville the mayor wanted to reduce the number of heavy trucks especially those hauling gasoline or liquid propane driving through the central business district In the state s application to AASHO they wanted to completely reroute the highway between Beardstown and Jacksonville Instead of heading north through Virginia the highway would then travel west along West Morton Road which carried US 36 and US 54 then to the northwest over IL 104 and then IL 100 north to Beardstown The application was approved and the state placed the new routing in effect on December 13 1967 33 The two alternate routes of US 67 in Illinois would not last through the mid 1960s Citing improvements to US 67 and US 67 Bypass in the St Louis area Illinois highway officials felt the alternate route utilizing the MacArthur Bridge simply was no longer necessary They would remumber the alternate route IL 3 upon approval 34 This change was approved by AASHO on June 19 1963 35 The next year officials sought to remove the other alternate route north of Godfrey because it was causing confusion among motorists 36 Instead they wanted to number the western route IL 267 This change received assent from AASHO on December 6 1964 37 Signage on the former alternate route was changed around April 1 1965 38 Clark Bridge edit nbsp The Clark Bridge as seen from the Alton marinaFurther information Clark Bridge Calls to replace the Clark Bridge at Alton began in the 1960s The mayor of Alton spoke to the state highway study commission and asked them to pursue a new bridge as the old bridge created traffic bottlenecks in his city 39 The mayor also showed frustration in the lack of progress with the state especially after an Illinois River bridge in Calhoun County was approved At the time the population of Calhoun County was lower than the daily number of vehicles using the Clark Bridge 40 The bridge was closed for extensive repairs during the latter half of 1975 Approximately 1 500 feet 460 m of the bridge s deck was replaced 41 IDOT announced in November 1980 that engineering work would soon begin on the new bridge 42 A report in 1982 listed four locations all of which were within 6 500 feet 2 000 m of the original bridge for consideration by the Illinois and Missouri departments of transportation 43 In April 1984 two semi trucks became wedged on the narrow bridge when they tried to pass by one another 44 Deteriorating steel floor beams led to an embargo on heavy truck traffic and a reduction of weight limits from 40 to 20 short tons 36 to 18 long tons 36 000 to 18 000 kg for semi trucks and 15 short tons 13 long tons 14 000 kg for dump trucks in late 1990 45 Design work on the new bridge began in 1985 46 In November 1989 the federal government released 26 4 million of discretionary funds for the construction of a 92 million four lane replacement equivalent to 51 million and 178 million respectively in 2021 7 47 By the end of 1991 the federal government had contributed 70 million to the project equivalent to 126 million in 2021 7 48 Engineers from IDOT decided on a cable stayed bridge to replace the old truss bridge the first of its kind in Greater St Louis 49 Construction on the piers began in 1991 and progressed without incident 46 The last piece of framing was installed on May 7 1993 Crews anticipated that the bridge would open around December 1 1993 50 The Great Flood of 1993 did not damage the bridge and construction was only delayed for two months when the U S Army Corps of Engineers closed the river to barge traffic 46 The new Clark Bridge opened on January 6 1994 51 Corridor 67 edit Beginning in 1989 a group of citizens from the western Illinois counties that comprise Forgottonia organized a group to advocate expanding US 67 to become a limited access highway from Alton to the Quad Cities The Corridor 67 committee expected the cost of the project to be 700 million equivalent to 1 35 billion in 2021 7 52 At the time the state secretary of transportation noted it was unlikely there would be any funds for that highway in the upcoming five year plan as federal highway dollars were already stretched 53 Illinois Secretary of State and later governor Jim Edgar expressed support for the Corridor 67 group s aspirations and hoped the route would be selected for the Avenue of the Saints highway 54 In order to sweeten their proposal to attract the Avenue of the Saints IDOT officials offered to increase their share of construction costs from 20 to 30 percent 55 Among politicians the Avenue of the Saints project was popular Both major political party candidates in the 1992 U S Senate election for Illinois supported funding the project The Democratic Party candidate and eventual winner Carol Moseley Braun even received reassurance from Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York who at the time was the chair of the senate committee that oversees federal highway funding Ultimately the Avenue of the Saints highway was not routed through Illinois but leaders from the Corridor 67 group hoped there could be a second Saints route through the state 56 By 1994 Corridor 67 formed a political action committee PAC 67 with the express intent of bringing attention to their project 57 The highway received some renewed interest during the 1998 election cycle Gubernatorial candidate and eventual winner George Ryan suggested moving fuel taxes back into the transportation budget in order to fund the US 67 project 58 nbsp The former routing of US 67 through RosevilleDespite in their opinion there never seeming to be any available funds to widen US 67 to four lanes members of the Corridor 67 group remained optimistic Engineers chose their preferred alignment along IL 267 from Alton to Jacksonville and then along the present alignment of US 67 north to the Quad Cities Some work was completed by the end of the 1990s widening between Monmouth and Macomb and a western bypass of Jacksonville 59 On July 5 2001 IDOT announced that crews would swap route markers on US 67 and IL 267 beginning July 9 60 The change was made to apply the US 67 designation to the entire Corridor 67 route before major projects began rather than after 61 The renumbering came to the surprise of residents and business owners along both routes who felt they were not given enough notice of the change IDOT officials disagreed and said that due diligence was done 62 Throughout the 2000s decade US 67 was widened further A bypass was built around Roseville which completed the four lane highway between Macomb and Monmouth 63 64 A new section from the former IL 267 highway near Murrayville connected to the western bypass of Jacksonville 64 65 While working south of Jerseyville in July 2010 remains of a 1400 year old Native American village was discovered Archeologists unearthed storage pits and floors made of flagstone Artifact excavation was completed about a month later 66 The Corridor 67 project is ongoing and is being completed as funds are available In 2003 the FHWA and IDOT signed off on plans to widen US 67 between Jacksonville and Macomb Those plans included a new 62 million crossing of the Illinois River at Beardstown equivalent to 89 million in 2021 7 as well as the construction of interchanges at IL 104 near Meredosia 6th Street in Beardstown IL 100 IL 103 across the river from Beardstown and US 24 at Rushville 67 Construction on the new bridge is scheduled to begin in 2023 and be completed in 2026 68 Major intersections editCountyLocationmi 2 kmExitDestinationsNotesMississippi River0 00 0 nbsp nbsp US 67 south St LouisContinuation into MissouriClark Bridge Missouri Illinois state lineMadisonAlton0 60 97 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 143 east Great River Road south Meeting of the Great Rivers south to IL 140 Wood RiverSouthern end of Great River Road and Meeting of the Great Rivers overlaps1 42 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 100 north Broadway Great River Road north Meeting of the Great Rivers north Grafton Pere Marquette State ParkNorthern end of Great River Road and Meeting of the Great Rivers overlapsGodfrey5 08 0 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 111 south to IL 3 Alton BethaltoSouthern end of IL 111 overlap7 411 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 111 north IL 267 north Lars Hoffmann Crossing to IL 255 BrightonNorthern end of IL 111 overlap7 912 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 255 south to I 270Southbound exit and northbound entrance onlyJerseyJerseyville20 032 2 nbsp nbsp IL 109 south Grafton20 232 5 nbsp IL 16 Carpenter Street GreeneCarrollton34 054 7 nbsp IL 108 Main Street White Hall44 070 8 nbsp nbsp IL 106 north WinchesterScott No major junctionsMorganMurrayville PrecinctMurrayville Road MurrayvilleFormer IL 267Lynnville Precinct62 4100 4 nbsp nbsp I 72 US 36 Springfield Quincy nbsp nbsp I 72 BL beginsSouthern end of I 72 BL overlapJacksonville65 1104 8 nbsp nbsp I 72 BL east Morton Avenue Northern end of I 72 BL overlap67 1108 0 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 104 east to IL 78 north JacksonvilleSouthern end of IL 104 overlapChapin Precinct71 5115 1 Concord Arenzville CR 7 Meredosia Precinct79 8128 4 nbsp nbsp IL 100 south Illinois River Road south BluffsSouthern end of IL 100 and Illinois River Road overlaps80 7129 9 nbsp nbsp IL 104 west Meredosia QuincyNorthern end of IL 104 overlap future interchangeCassBeardstown94 1151 4 nbsp nbsp IL 125 east Virginia6th StreetFuture interchangeIllinois River95 0152 9Beardstown BridgeSchuylerBainbridge Township96 1154 7 nbsp nbsp IL 100 north Illinois River Road north Havana nbsp nbsp IL 103 west Mount SterlingNorthern end of IL 100 and Illinois River Road overlaps future interchangeRushville105 0169 0 nbsp US 24 Clinton Street Rushville Mount SterlingFuture interchangeLittleton Township113 3182 3 nbsp nbsp IL 101 west Littleton AugustaMcDonoughScotland Township129 4208 2 nbsp nbsp US 136 east AdairSouthern end of US 136 overlapMacomb132 4213 1 nbsp nbsp US 136 west CarthageNorthern end of US 136 overlapEmmet Macombtownship line nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 110 CKC west IL 336 south CarthageSouthern end of IL 110 CKC overlapGood Hope138 6223 1 nbsp IL 9 Bushnell LaHarpeWarrenPoint Pleasant Swantownship line149 9241 2 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 67 Bus north RosevilleEllison Township151 4243 7 nbsp IL 116 Roseville MediaRoseville Township153 8247 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 67 Bus south RosevilleLenox Monmouthtownship line162 8262 0 nbsp nbsp US 34 east S Main Street BurlingtonSouthern end of US 34 overlapMonmouth164 3264 4 nbsp nbsp IL 164 west Broadway OquawkaSouthern end of IL 164 overlap165 8266 8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 34 east IL 110 CKC east IL 164 east GalesburgNorthern end of US 34 IL 110 CKC and IL 164 overlapsWarren Mercercounty lineSpring Grove Sueztownship line175 8282 9 nbsp nbsp IL 135 west Little YorkSouthern end of IL 135 overlap177 5285 7 nbsp nbsp IL 135 east AlexisNorthern end of IL 135 overlapMercerViola187 0300 9 nbsp IL 17 New Windsor AledoRock IslandBowling Township200 3322 4 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp IL 94 west to IL 192 Taylor Ridge Muscatine IowaMilanMilan Beltway CR 78 92nd Ave W 204 6329 3 nbsp nbsp nbsp Airport Road to I 280 Quad City AirportRock Island206 0331 5 nbsp nbsp IL 5 east 46th Avenue Black Hawk State Historic Site nbsp nbsp 11th Street to IL 92213 8344 1 nbsp nbsp To IL 92 Centennial Expressway 2nd AvenueSouthbound exit and northbound entrance onlyMississippi River214 0344 4Rock Island Centennial Bridge Illinois Iowa state line nbsp nbsp US 67 north DavenportContinuation into Iowa1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete access UnopenedRelated routes editU S Route 67 Business Roseville Illinois U S Route 67 Alternate St Louis Missouri Alton Illinois U S Route 67 Alternate Godfrey Murrayville Illinois References edit Illinois Secretary of State 1931 Official Illinois Highway Map Map c 1 950 000 and c 1 1 110 000 Springfield Illinois Secretary of State via Illinois Digital Archives a b c d e f Google January 30 2022 U S Route 67 in Illinois Map Google Maps Google Retrieved January 30 2022 a b c d e Illinois Department of Transportation 2015 Illinois Official Highway Map PDF Map 2015 2016 ed 1 762 500 Springfield Illinois Department of Transportation Retrieved February 1 2022 Burlington Way is now Mississippi Valley Road American Motorist Vol XI no 11 December 1 1919 p 34 Retrieved January 28 2018 via Google Books nbsp Illinois State Highway Department 1917 Map Showing Marked Through Routes in Illinois Map Scale not given Springfield Illinois State Highway Department via Illinois Digital Archives Illinois Secretary of State 1924 Illinois Official Auto Trails Map Map c 1 950 000 and c 1 1 110 000 Springfield Illinois Secretary of State via Illinois Digital Archives a b c d e f Johnston Louis Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved January 1 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the Measuring Worth series Election Notice Dixon Evening Telegraph Dixon Illinois October 29 1918 p 2 Retrieved February 3 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Illinois lifted out of the mud link wins too Chicago Tribune November 6 1918 p 1 Retrieved February 3 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Draw petition in efforts to alter highway The Jacksonville Daily Journal Jacksonville Illinois December 10 1920 p 8 Retrieved February 3 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp 100 000 000 bond issue for great Illinois highway system paid by auto fees Journal Gazette Mattoon Illinois October 20 1924 p 8 Retrieved February 3 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Wrone David R 1965 Illinois Pulls out of the Mud Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society University of Illinois Press 58 1 54 76 JSTOR 40190426 Retrieved February 28 2023 Illinois Secretary of State Rand McNally 1927 Illinois Official Auto Road Map Map c 1 950 000 and c 1 1 110 000 Springfield Illinois Secretary of State Retrieved February 3 2022 via Illinois Digital Archives Illinois Secretary of State H M Gousha 1928 Illinois Official Auto Road Map Map c 1 950 000 and c 1 1 110 000 Springfield Illinois Secretary of State Retrieved February 3 2022 via Illinois Digital Archives a b Alton placed on Federal Highway 67 U S official body approves routing Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois March 28 1930 p 1 Retrieved February 4 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Veteran editor urges change in U S Highway 67 Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois April 17 1930 p 11 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Ask federal road shift to be made Alton Jerseyville Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois September 19 1935 p 8 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Madison County jobs are among those to be bid on Belleville Daily Advocate Belleville Illinois AP January 11 1940 p 2 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp New road map now ready for distribution The Belleville News Democrat Belleville Illinois March 20 1941 p 16 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Already a major highway Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois October 9 1940 p 3 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Gorge ice surges loose in Rock River closing traffic across bridges into Milan The Rock Island Argus Rock Island Illinois March 6 1937 pp 1 2 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Flood threatens Burlington track east of Barstow The Dispatch Moline Illinois March 9 1937 pp 1 13 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Span across southernmost branch of river settling as masonry at pier crumbles The Rock Island Argus Rock Island Illinois March 24 1937 pp 1 2 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Bridge to Milan again closed as west end drops The Democrat and Leader Davenport Iowa April 4 1937 p 27 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Span Over Rock River Is Opened to All Traffic The Rock Island Argus April 7 1937 p 7 Retrieved February 28 2023 via Newspapers com nbsp New 4 Lane Bridges Over Rock River Finished in 49 at Cost of 1 500 000 The Dispatch December 31 1949 p 31 Retrieved February 28 2023 via Newspapers com nbsp Changes made in numbers of state routes Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois March 25 1939 p 1 Retrieved February 4 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Anniversary of Lewis amp Clark Bridges Sunday Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois July 15 1939 p 1 Retrieved February 4 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp U S Route Numbering Committee 1952 Report of the U S Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials Retrieved February 5 2022 via Wikimedia Commons Beardstown to celebrate opening of new highway bridge Tuesday Section 2 The Jacksonville Daily Journal Jacksonville Illinois September 11 1955 p 3 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Foust Hal December 12 1958 U S 66 Springfield bypass to start in 59 Chicago Tribune p 15 Retrieved February 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp U S Route Numbering Committee November 26 1960 U S Route Numbering Committee Agenda PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials Retrieved February 5 2022 via Wikimedia Commons Beardstown J ville route change set for December 13 Journal Courier Jacksonville Illinois November 26 1967 p 36 Retrieved February 6 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Staff Virden E May 8 1963 An Application from the State Highway Department of Illinois for the Elimination of an Alternate U S Route 67 Report U S Route Numbering Committee June 19 1963 U S Route Numbering Committee Agenda PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials Retrieved February 5 2022 via Wikimedia Commons Staff Virden E October 7 1964 An Application from the State Highway Department of Illinois for the Elimination of an Alternate U S Route 67 Report U S Route Numbering Committee December 6 1964 U S Route Numbering Committee Agenda Showing Action Taken by AASHO Executive Committee PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials Retrieved February 6 2022 via Wikimedia Commons Route 67A becomes 267 Journal Courier Jacksonville Illinois March 21 1965 p 9 Retrieved February 6 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Commission hears traffic problems The Belleville News Democrat Belleville Illinois November 14 1968 p 12 Retrieved February 7 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Wiseman questions bridge plan stall Alton Evening Telegraph Alton Illinois July 3 1967 p 1 Retrieved May 8 2022 Clark span repairs near end St Louis Post Dispatch October 30 1975 p 9C Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Work to begin soon on bridge project St Louis Post Dispatch November 20 1980 p 3A Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Koman Karen September 9 1982 4 sites studied for new bridge over Mississippi St Charles Post St Louis p 1 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp LaRouche Robert April 3 1984 Trapped St Louis Post Dispatch p 3A Retrieved May 8 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Truck traffic is restricted across deteriorating bridge The Belleville News Democrat Belleville Illinois September 29 1990 p 9 Retrieved February 7 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c Goodyear David Salamie Ralph August 1994 The new Clark Bridge saddle draped cables Civil Engineering Vol 64 no 8 New York American Society of Civil Engineers pp 46 47 ISSN 0885 7024 ProQuest 228482554 Retrieved May 9 2022 via ProQuest nbsp Kelly Robert November 11 1989 Fanfare greets Clark Bridge funds St Louis Post Dispatch p 3A Retrieved May 8 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Koenig Robert L December 19 1991 U S releases more money for new Clark Bridge at Alton St Louis Post Dispatch p 3A Retrieved May 8 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Gauen Pat June 27 1991 Replacement span at Alton is treat for bridge lover St Louis Post Dispatch pp I1 I2 Retrieved May 8 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Gauen Pat May 7 1993 Clark Bridge gets closure piece today St Louis Post Dispatch p 1 Retrieved May 8 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp De Bruce Orlando January 6 1994 Clark Bridge opens today The Belleville News Democrat Belleville Illinois p 1 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Frank Cheryl February 10 1989 Group wants state to revamp U S 67 Herald amp Review Decatur Illinois p A4 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Frank Cheryl February 17 1989 Highway upgrade hopes dim Herald amp Review Decatur Illinois p A5 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Edgar endorses marching Saints route along U S 67 The Dispatch Moline Illinois May 30 1990 p D2 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Felker Edward June 8 1990 State offers incentive for Saints route The Rock Island Argus Rock Island Illinois p 1 Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Loretz Carol October 10 1992 Key senator says Saints route may include Illinois The Rock Island Argus Rock Island Illinois p B5 Retrieved May 12 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Felker Edward November 8 1994 Q C PACs make presents sic felt in 94 campaign The Dispatch Moline Illinois p A6 Retrieved May 12 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Norton Marcy July 15 1998 Ryan Baker line up for 4 lane U S 67 The Dispatch Moline Illinois p C4 Retrieved May 12 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Hillig Terry April 5 1999 Road s prospects are rosy says leader of superhighway task force St Louis Post Dispatch pp AA1 AA7 Retrieved May 13 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp US 67 IL 267 Highway Markings to Change Press release Springfield Illinois Department of Transportation July 5 2001 Archived from the original on January 11 2002 Retrieved May 10 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Gillig Terry July 30 2001 New changes in numbers of state highways is drawing some criticism St Louis Post Dispatch p MC7 Retrieved May 13 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Pranaitis Laura July 26 2001 Road to confusion Alton Telegraph Alton Illinois Retrieved May 10 2022 via Newspaperarchive com nbsp Illinois Department of Transportation 2001 Illinois Highway Map Map 2001 2002 ed 1 762 500 Springfield Illinois Department of Transportation F3 Retrieved November 24 2022 via Illinois Digital Archives a b Illinois Department of Transportation 2003 Illinois Highway Map Map 2003 2004 ed 1 762 500 Springfield Illinois Department of Transportation F3 Retrieved November 24 2022 via Illinois Digital Archives Illinois Department of Transportation 2005 Illinois Highway Map Map 2005 2006 ed 1 762 500 Springfield Illinois Department of Transportation F3 Retrieved November 24 2022 via Illinois Digital Archives Borman Maggie July 17 2010 Dig uncovers ancient settlement Southern Illinoisan Carbondale Illinois Associated Press p 4B Retrieved May 9 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Stoner Norman R March 6 2003 U S 67 FAP 310 Jacksonville to Macomb PDF Report Federal Highway Administration Retrieved May 13 2022 Dawson Dave July 6 2022 Beardstown readies for new bridge over Illinois River Jacksonville Journal Courier Retrieved March 19 2023 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 67 in IllinoisKML is from Wikidata US 67 Corridor Illinois Department of Transportation 21 July 2014 nbsp Media related to U S Route 67 in Illinois at Wikimedia Commons nbsp U S Route 67Previous state Missouri Illinois Next state Iowa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 67 in Illinois amp oldid 1145640461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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