Arizona State Route 77

State Route 77 marker

State Route 77
Route information
Maintained by ADOT
Length: 253.93 mi[1] (408.66 km)
Existed: 1941 – present
Major junctions
South end: I-10 in Tucson
  US 70 in Globe
US 60 from Globe to Show Low
US 180 in Holbrook
I-40 in Holbrook
North end: BIA Route 6 at Navajo Indian Reservation boundary
Highway system
SR 75SR 78
SR 8484ASR 85

State Route 77 (or SR 77) is a state highway in Arizona that traverses much of the state's length, stretching from its northern terminus at the boundary of the Navajo Nation north of Holbrook to its junction with I-10 in Tucson.

Route description

At its southern terminus, north of Tucson, the road is known as Oracle Road[2] until the final mile and a half when the road turns westward directly toward Interstate 10 and is called Miracle Mile Road,[2] named such in 1962.[3]

Route 77 traveling through Salt River Canyon
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arizona State Route 77.

Past the Navajo Nation boundary, SR 77 becomes BIA Route 6 northbound towards Keams Canyon. Between Show Low and Globe, this highway is concurrent with U.S. Route 60. Its southernmost reaches were formerly part of U.S. Route 80 and U.S. Route 89, except for its terminal segment, the Miracle Mile segment of old Business 10 and State Route 84A.

Origin of the name of Tucson's Miracle Mile

Although it was thought for several years that Tucson's Miracle Mile derived its name from a June 1937 Arizona Highways magazine, historian David Leighton challenged this theory, in a February 23, 2015, article in the Arizona Daily Star newspaper. He explained that in 1936, real estate developer Stanley Williamson conceived the idea of creating a commercial center outside of the over-congested downtown retail district, in Tucson. His model for this business center was the Miracle Mile in Los Angeles, Calif. The one in L.A., was the idea of real estate agent A.W. Ross, who saw that the retail district in that city was overcrowded and, also saw that cars were becoming more common. He came up with the idea of buying farming land, along Wilshire Blvd., several miles out from downtown, with the belief that as more people bought automobiles they would be willing to drive farther, in order to avoid the lack of parking and congestion in the downtown area. While initially no one thought his idea would work, in time store after store came to his business center. The Miracle Mile eventually became one of Los Angeles' premier shopping districts. Ross originally called his business area, the Wilshire Boulevard Center, it was changed to the Miracle Mile in 1928.

Junction list

CountyLocationmi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
PimaTucson0.000.00 I-10 Phoenix, El PasoSouthern terminus; I-10 exit 255
Oro Valley SR 989 (Tangerine Road)SR 989 unsigned; serves Oro Valley Hospital
Pinal SR 79 north (Pinal Pioneer Parkway) Florence, Phoenix
Veterans Memorial Boulevard – San ManuelInterchange; serves San Manuel Airport
GilaWinkelman SR 177 north (2nd Street) Superior
Globe US 70 east SaffordSouth end of US 70 overlap
US 70 end / US 60 west (Ash Street) Globe, PhoenixSouth end of US 60 overlap; north end of US 70 overlap
Navajo SR 73 east
Show Low SR 260 west (Clark Road) HeberSouth end of SR 260 overlap
SR 260 east (White Mountain Road) Pinetop-LakesideNorth end of SR 260 overlap
US 60 east (Deuce of Clubs) SpringervilleNorth end of US 60 overlap
Snowflake SR 277 west (3rd Street North) Heber
SR 377 south (Heber Road) Heber
Holbrook US 180 east St. JohnsSouth end of US 180 overlap
US 180 west (Hopi Drive) to I-40 FlagstaffNorth end of US 180 overlap
I-40 west / I-40 BL east (Navajo Boulevard) FlagstaffSouth end of I-40 overlap; I-40 exit 286
289 I-40 BL west (Navajo Boulevard)Exit number follows I-40
I-40 east AlbuquerqueNorth end of I-40 overlap; I-40 exit 292
Navajo Nation boundary238.79384.30BIA Route 6 northNorthern terminus; continuation into Navajo Nation as BIA Route 6
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

External links

References

Route map: Bing / Google

KML is from Wikidata
  1. 1 2 Arizona Department of Transportation. "2008 ADOT Highway Log" (PDF). Retrieved April 9, 2008.
  2. 1 2 Tucson @ AARoads.com
  3. Devine, Dave (October 9–15, 1997). "Motel Memories". Tucson Weekly. Tucson.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.