Oklahoma State Highway 7

State Highway 7 (abbreviated SH-7) is a 150.5-mile (242.2 km) highway in southern Oklahoma. This lengthy highway connects many towns in Oklahoma's "Little Dixie" area. It runs from Interstate 44 in Lawton to U.S. 69/US-75 in Atoka.

State Highway 7 marker

State Highway 7

Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length150.5 mi[1] (242.2 km)
Major junctions
West end I-44 / US 277 / US 281 in Lawton
Major intersections US 81 from Marlow to Duncan
I-35 near Davis
US 77 in Davis
East end
US 69 / US 75 / SH-3 / SH-3 Byp. in Atoka
Location
CountryUnited States
StateOklahoma
Highway system
  • Oklahoma State Highway System
SH-6 SH-8
SH-7 shield in Sulphur

Route description

From its western terminus at the interchange with Interstate 44 and Lee Boulevard in Lawton, SH-7 is a multilane highway. It runs due east from Lawton for ten miles (16 km) before intersecting State Highway 65 in the unincorporated community of Pumpkin Center. It continues due east for 14 more miles on a straight stretch of highway only very slight curves, bypassing the town of Central High, before meeting US-81 north of Duncan.

SH-7 and US-81 overlap for 6 miles (9.7 km) through Duncan, after which the state highway splits off to the east once again, still as a multilane highway, though it falls to a two-lane road after a few miles. Next the highway passes through the town of Velma before meeting State Highway 76 in Ratliff City. The southern section of SH-74, which roughly mirrors SH-76's path, has its southern terminus at SH-7 seven miles (11 km) later, near Tatums.

After crossing Interstate 35, SH-7 becomes a multilane highway once again. Three miles later, it meets US-77 near Davis. On the other side of Davis, SH-7 is the northern terminus of SH-110, a connector route to the town of Dougherty. Two miles west of Sulphur, the highway connects to the southern terminus of SH-7 Spur which connects to the Chickasaw Turnpike, a toll highway to Ada. After passing through Sulphur (where it has a brief concurrency with US-177), SH-7 travels six more miles, where it meets Highway 1.

For ten miles (16 km), SH-7 and SH-1 overlap, through the town of Mill Creek. This concurrency ends three miles (4.8 km) south of Mill Creek, where it serves the unincorporated community of Reagan and the Slippery Falls Boy Scout Ranch. It shares a one-mile (1.6 km) three-route concurrency with US-377/SH-99. Thirteen miles east of the concurrency, it serves the town of Wapanucka, Oklahoma, where it intersects SH-48. Seventeen miles later, it ends at US-75 in Atoka.

History

SH-7 is a former border to border eastwest state highway across southern Oklahoma whose western terminus was at the Texas border west of Hollis and eastern terminus at the Arkansas border east of Broken Bow. SH-7's route was truncated on its eastern and western sections during the 1960s and 1970s as those were concurrent with US-62 between the Texas border and Lawton and with US-70 between Broken Bow and the Arkansas border.[2] The eastern portion of SH-7 that was concurrent with US-70 between Broken Bow and the Arkansas border was truncated in 1963 to its junction with US-70 in Broken Bow.[3] The western section of SH-7 concurrent with US-62 from Lawton to the Texas border was truncated in 1970,[4] when the highway's western terminus was pushed back to the intersection of Cache Road (US-62) and Sheridan Road in Lawton, and a few miles further back in 2003 to its current terminus at Interstate 44 in east Lawton.[5]

Along still-intact sections of SH-7, major route changes through the years include a relocation in Duncan during the early 1950s, when the original route along Main Street through the downtown area was moved south of the business district along Bois D'Arc Avenue from US-81 eastward to tie in with the original Main Street route on Duncan's east side, which became SH-7 Alternate and now designated as SH-7 Business. In 1969, the main Bois D'Arc Avenue alignment in Duncan was relocated slightly to the south and the rerouting continued for some 20 miles (32 km) from the SH-7/SH-7 Business junction to Velma on a new and straighter alignment (including both multi-lane divided highway and two-lane roadway) that bypassed the old SH-7 alignment through the oil fields of eastern Stephens County along with the town of Velma.[6] In the 1980s, the new SH-7 was extended east of Velma past the small community of County Line on the Stephens–Carter county line to west of Ratliff City in Carter County.[7][8]

By 1985, the eastern terminus of SH-7 was pushed back to its intersection with SH-3 and US-69/75 in Atoka when SH-7 was again truncated and lost its concurrency with SH-3 from Atoka to Broken Bow.[7]

Spurs

SH-7 has three spur routes. Two of these routes bear the number "7" with a letter suffix; the third is a special route.

SH-7A

State Highway 7A marker

State Highway 7A

LocationDuncan
Length1.99 mi[9] (3.20 km)

SH-7A, also signed as Business SH-7, is the original alignment of SH-7 through Duncan but it is unsigned. SH-7A begins at an intersection with SH-81A and Ninth Street. It heads east for approximately 1.9 miles and then turns south to meet its southern terminus at SH-7.

SH-7D

State Highway 7D marker

State Highway 7D

LocationBromide
Length3.50 mi[10] (5.63 km)

SH-7D is a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) spur to the town of Bromide.

SH-7 Spur

State Highway 7 Spur marker

State Highway 7 Spur

LocationMurray County
Length4 mi[11] (6.4 km)
ExistedAugust 1, 2011–present

SH-7 Spur is a four-mile (6.4 km) spur in Murray County. It begins at SH-7 west of Sulphur, heading northeast, to end at a diamond interchange with US-177. The road continues east as the Chickasaw Turnpike.[11]

SH-7 Spur was built by the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority (OTA) as the westernmost segment of the Chickasaw Turnpike, which opened on September 1, 1991.[12] It was transferred from OTA to ODOT on August 1, 2011, receiving the SH-7 Spur designation and becoming a free road. It was the first segment of turnpike in Oklahoma to be transferred to ODOT. Transferring the turnpike was considered an inexpensive way to solve the problem of excessive truck traffic in Sulphur. At the time of the transfer, the interchange at the eastern terminus only allowed access from the westbound turnpike to US-177, and from US-177 to the eastbound turnpike.[13] ODOT had expanded the interchange to a full interchange by 2013.[11]

Junction list

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
ComancheLawton0.00.0 I-44 / US 277 / US 281Western terminus
Pumpkin Center9.415.1 SH-65
StephensMarlowDuncan line22.536.2Duncan BypassNorthern terminus of Duncan Bypass
23.337.5 US 81Northern end of US-81 concurrency
Duncan29.647.6 SH-81AWestern terminus of SH-7B
30.448.9 US 81/Duncan BypassSouthern end of US-81 concurrency, southern terminus of Duncan Bypass
30.949.7 SH-81AWestern end of SH-81A concurrency
31.150.1 SH-81AEastern end of SH-81A concurrency
32.952.9 SH-7AEastern terminus of SH-7A
CarterRatliff City58.193.5 SH-76
65.2104.9 SH-74Southern terminus of SH-74
Murray79.3127.6 I-35
Davis82.1132.1 US 77Western end of US-77 concurrency
82.5132.8 US 77Eastern end of US-77 concurrency
84.2135.5 SH-110Northern terminus of SH-110
Sulphur88.7142.7 SH-7 SpurSouthern terminus of SH-7 Spur
91.2146.8 US 177
91.5147.3 US 177
Scullin98.2158.0 SH-1Northern end of SH-1 concurrency
Johnston109.2175.7 SH-1Southern end of SH-1 concurrency
119.8192.8 US 377 / SH-99Southern end of US-377/SH-99 concurrency
120.8194.4 US 377 / SH-99Northern end of US-377/SH-99 concurrency
125.7202.3 SH-7DNorthern terminus of SH-7D
Wapanucka133.5214.8 SH-48
AtokaAtoka150.5242.2 US 69 / US 75 / SH-3Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. Google (January 3, 2013). "Oklahoma State Highway 7" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 3, 2013.
  2. McMahon, Martin. "Terminus: SH-7". Roadklahoma. Retrieved 2007-03-24.
  3. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1963 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  4. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1971 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  5. Official State Highway Map (Map) (2003-2004 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  6. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1970 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  7. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1985 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  8. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1986 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  9. Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: Stephens County (PDF) (Map) (2010–2011 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 22, 2013.
  10. Oklahoma Department of Transportation (n.d.). Control Section Maps: Johnston County (PDF) (Map) (2010–2011 ed.). Scale not given. Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 22, 2013.
  11. Official State Map (PDF) (Map) (2013–14 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation. 2013. Turnpike inset. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  12. Staff. "OTA History". Oklahoma Turnpike Authority. Archived from the original on April 10, 2008. Retrieved February 5, 2008.
  13. Staff (August 1, 2011). "Minutes For the Regular Transportation Commission Meeting" (PDF). Oklahoma Transportation Commission. Retrieved April 22, 2013.
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