Battle of Old Fort Wayne

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State Highway 28 (abbreviated SH-28) is a state highway in Oklahoma. It runs 68.4 miles (110.1 km) in an irregular west-to-east pattern through Nowata, Rogers, Mayes and Delaware counties.

There is one letter-suffixed spur highway branching from SH-28, SH-28A.

Route description

SH-28 begins at US-169 just south of Delaware. From there it travels 12 miles (19 km) east-to-south, passing the community of Childers, to a junction with US-60.

Crossing US-60, SH-28 runs six miles (10 km) due south to New Alluwe, then eight miles (13 km) south and east to Chelsea, where it intersects SH-66.

From Chelsea, it is six miles (10 km) straight south to the junction with SH-28A, where SH-28 turns due east, intersects with I-44 after four miles (6 km), and five miles (8 km) farther crosses US-69 at Adair.

Upon leaving Adair, SH-28 runs mainly east, eight miles (13 km) to Pensacola, then follows the arc of the Neosho River to the SH-82 junction outside of Langley. SH-28 crosses SH-82, then passes through Langley before crossing the Neosho River over Pensacola Dam into the town of Disney.

SH-28 then travels east to south 12 miles (19 km) to its terminus at SH-20, five miles (8 km) west of Jay.

SH-28A

SH-28A is SH-28's only spur, lying entirely in Rogers County. It runs 4.56 miles (7.34 km) west-to-east connecting SH-66 in Foyil with SH-28.[2]

Junction list

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
NowataDelaware0.00.0 US 169Western terminus
11.418.3 US 60
RogersChelsea25.941.7 SH-66Northern end of SH-66 concurrency
26.542.6 SH-66Southern end of SH-66 concurrency
32.652.5 SH-28AEastern terminus of SH-28A
Mayes35.657.3 I-44 / Will Rogers TurnpikeAccess to westbound I-44 and from eastbound I-44 only
Adair41.767.1 US 69
Langley54.687.9 SH-82Northern end of SH-82 concurrency
55.489.2 SH-82Southern end of SH-82 concurrency
Delaware68.4110.1 SH-20Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. ^ a b Google (January 13, 2013). "Oklahoma State Highway 28" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
  2. ^ Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: Rogers County (PDF) (Map) (2010–2011 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 13, 2013.

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