(Redirected from U.S. Highway 89)
'U.S. Route 89' is a north-south
United States highway with two sections. The southern section runs for 848 miles (1,365 km) from
Flagstaff, Arizona to the southern entrance of
Yellowstone National Park. The northern section runs for 404 miles (650 km) the northern entrance of Yellowstone National Park to
Montana. Prior to 1992 U.S. 89 was a
Mexico to
Canada border-to-border highway beginning at
Nogales, Arizona[2].
Route description
| Major cities |
|---|
★ Tucson, Arizona (until 1992) ★ Phoenix, Arizona (until 1992) ★ Flagstaff, Arizona ★ Richfield, Utah ★ Provo, Utah ★ Salt Lake City, Utah ★ Ogden, Utah ★ Logan, Utah ★ Jackson, Wyoming ★ Bozeman, Montana ★ Great Falls, Montana |
Arizona
U.S. 89 begins at Flagstaff, Arizona, the highway proceeds north passing near
Grand Canyon National Park and through the the
Navajo Nation. Near the Utah State Line the highway splits into U.S. 89 and
U.S. 89A. The Alternate is the original highway, what is now the main highway was constructed in the 1960's to serve the
Glen Canyon Dam. The two highways rejoin in
Kanab, Utah.
The main branch passes over the
Colorado River just south of the Glen Canyon Dam and
Lake Powell near
Page then enters Utah. The Alternate branch crosses the Colorado River at
Navajo Bridge and proceeds to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon before entering Utah.
Utah
The first city in Utah along either U.S. 89 or U.S. 89 Alternate is Kanab where the two routes re-unite. Utah signs their portion of 89 Alternate as
Utah State Route 11/TO U.S. 89A. From Kanab U.S. 89 proceeds north passing by
Zion National Park and
Bryce Canyon National Park. It eventually enters the Sevier and Sanpete Valleys where Turkey Farming is one of the most important parts of the local economy. The highway then passes by
Thistle a ghost town destroyed by a 1983
landslide. The highway then enters the
Wasatch Front where U.S 89 becomes the main streets of the largest cities in Utah. The highway becomes State Street in
Salt Lake. The highway is also often in the shadows of
Interstate 15 during the Wasatch Front run. The highway departs the I-15 corridor at
Brigham City to serve
Cache Valley and
Logan. In Logan U.S. 89 is named "University Blvd." and passes by the
Utah State University campus. The highway then proceeds up
Logan Canyon to
Bear Lake where the highway exits Utah.
2 sections of U.S 89 have been designated "Scenic Byway's" by the Utah State Legislature. North of Kanab is designated the 'Kanab to Mt Carmel and Long Valley Scenic Byway' and from Logan to Bear Lake is designated the 'Logan Canyon Scenic Byway'
The Utah section of US 89, other than concurrencies with
Interstate 70,
Interstate 15,
US 6, and
US 91, is defined at Utah Code Annotated § 72-4-114(8).
[1]
Idaho
In Idaho the highway partially circumnavigates
Bear Lake which straddles the Utah/Idaho state line
Wyoming
In Wyoming U.S. 89 passes through many tourist attractions including Yellowstone and
Grand Teton National Parks, the
Jackson Hole Valley, the Grand Canyon of the
Snake River, and
Star Valley.
Montana
As of
2005, the highway's northern terminus is
Piegan, Montana at the
Canadian border (the highway continues into Canada as
Alberta Highway 2).
History
Prior to 1992, the southern terminus of U.S. 89 was at
Nogales, Arizona and the route proceeded to Flagstaff along what is now
Interstate 19,
Arizona State Route 79,
U.S. Route 60,
U.S. Route 93 and
Arizona State Route 89. In addition there was another U.S. 89 Alternate in Arizona between
Prescott and Flagstaff this route is now
Arizona State Route 89A.
See also
★
U.S. Route 189
★
List of U.S. Routes
External links
★
Utah Official State Tourism Site - Scenic Byway
References
1. Droz, Robert V. U.S. Highways : From US 1 to (US 830). URL accessed 02:55, 4 July 2006 (UTC).
2. http://www.geocities.com/usend8089/End089/end089.htm U.S. Highway Ends by Mapguy (personal website last retrieved 7-7-07)