Arkansas Highway 78 Explained

State:AR
Type:AR
Route:78
Established:April 1, 1926
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:Highway 78 in red; Highway 78S in blue in Moro
Length Mi1:24.03
Length Ref1:[1]
Direction A1:West
Terminus A1: near Hunter
Junction1:
Direction B1:East
Terminus B1: near Moro
Length Mi2:4.30
Direction A2:East
Terminus A2: in Aubrey
Direction B2:West
Terminus B2: near Aubrey
Counties:Woodruff, St. Francis, Lee
Previous Type:US
Previous Route:78
Next Type:US
Next Route:79

Highway 78 (AR 78, Ark. 78, and Hwy. 78) is a designation for two state highways in the Arkansas Delta. One route of 24.03miles begins at Highway 306 near Hunter and runs southeast to US Highway 79 (US 79). A second route of 4.3miles begins at Highway 121 and runs west to a junction with Lee County Route 132 (CR 132) and CR 173. A short spur route in Moro, Highway 78 Spur connects the parent route to Highway 238. All routes are maintained by the Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department (AHTD).

Both segments of Highway 78 serve the Arkansas Delta, an extremely rural part of the state. Passing through only a few small towns, the highway's setting is a flat agricultural landscape in cultivation crossed by drainage ditches, swamps, and bayous. One of the original Arkansas state highways, Highway 78 was slowly extended in the middle of the 20th century during a period of rapid growth in the Arkansas Highway System. The Aubrey-Big Creek route was created in 1973, marking the last change for the highway designation until the addition of Highway 78 Spur in 2001. The entire route between Hunter and US 79 is designated as an Arkansas Heritage Trail, a route used by John S. Marmaduke's Confederate Missouri cavalry prior to the Battle of Helena during the American Civil War.

Route description

Hunter to US 79

The route begins in southeastern Woodruff County at Highway 306 near Hunter. Running south as a section line road, the highway enters St. Francis County, passing through Posey before entering Wheatley.[2] Highway 78 intersects two national east-west routes in Wheatley, Interstate 40 in the north part of the city, and US 70 in the southern portion. Following this intersection, Highway 78 takes a southeasterly turn and angles into Lee County.[3] Entering from the county's sparsely populated northwest corner, Highway 78 passes through Nash Corner before a brief overlap with Highway 259 at South Plains. Now turning due south, Highway 78 enters the small town of Moro. Highway 78 Spur in downtown Moro offers access to Highway 238, leading toward Brinkley. Following this intersection, Highway 78 exits Moro to the southeast, intersecting US 79, where it terminates.[4]

Aubrey to Big Creek

Highway 78 begins at Highway 121 in Aubrey in southern Lee County. The route runs due west as a section line road until crossing into the riparian zone for Big Creek. Highway 78 crosses McNulty Lake, created by a slow moving portion of Big Creek, on an open deck steel bridge. Shortly after this bridge, the highway terminates at an intersection of gravel county routes.

History

Highway 78 was designated as one of the original state highways on April 1, 1926. Running between US 70 in Wheatley and State Road 3., the route remained unchanged for almost 50 years. An extension north to I-40 on February 28, 1968 was part of a program to connect newly built Interstate highways with the US highways they paralleled.[5] On July 29, 1970, the highway was extended by the Arkansas State Highway Commission (ASHC) to the current northern terminus at Highway 306.[6]

A second segment of Highway 78 was created between Aubrey and a county road intersection near Big Creek on March 28, 1973 pursuant to Act 9 of 1973 by the Arkansas General Assembly.[7] The act directed county judges and legislators to designate up to 12miles of county roads as state highways in each county.[8]

Spur route

State:AR
Route:78
Type:AR-Spur
Main Street
Length Mi:0.08
Length Round:2
Formed:February 21, 2001
Location:Moro

Highway 78 Spur (AR 78S, Ark. 78S, and Hwy. 78S) is a spur route of 0.08miles in Moro.

Route description
The route begins at Highway 78 in downtown Moro and runs southwest for one block to Highway 238.

History
Formerly under city maintenance, the one block connecting Highway 78 and Highway 238 was added to the state highway network by the ASHC on February 21, 2001.[9]

Major intersections

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Arkansas Road Log Database . System Information and Research Division . 2014 . Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . MDB . March 27, 2016 . Little Rock . August 29, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170829203521/http://www.arkansashighways.com/System_Info_and_Research/traffic_info/databases/Road%20Log%20Database.zip . dead .
  2. Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . General Highway Map, Woodruff County, Arkansas . Little Rock . PDF . April 3, 2014 . 1:62,500 . November 29, 2016 .
  3. Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . General Highway Map, St. Francis County, Arkansas . Little Rock . PDF . February 17, 2015 . 1:62,500 . November 29, 2016 .
  4. Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department . General Highway Map, Lee County, Arkansas . Little Rock . PDF . February 17, 2015 . 1:62,500 . November 29, 2016 .
  5. Web site: Minutes of the Meeting . 1953–1969 . Arkansas State Highway Commission . Little Rock . March 12, 2017 . 130 . October 1, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181001143728/http://www.arkansashighways.com/minute_orders/Mo53-69.pdf . dead .
  6. .
  7. .
  8. Web site: Development of Highway and Transportation Legislation in Arkansas: A Review of the Acts Relative to Administering and Financing Highways and Transportation in Arkansas . 13 . . . ((Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department: Planning and Research Division, Policy Analysis Section)) . 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20200206150754/https://www.ardot.gov/Trans_Plan_Policy/policy_legis/publications/Dev%20Hwy%20Legislation.pdf . February 6, 2020. dead .
  9. Web site: Minutes of the Meeting . 2000–2009 . Arkansas State Highway Commission . Little Rock . 197 . December 4, 2016 .