Montana Highway 28 Explained

State:MT
Type:MT
Route:28
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:MT 28 highlighted in red
Length Mi:46.734
Length Ref:[1]
Established:1924
Direction A:South
Terminus A: in Plains
Direction B:North
Terminus B: in Elmo
Counties:Sanders, Lake, Flathead
Previous Type:MT
Previous Route:25
Next Type:MT
Next Route:35

Montana Highway 28 (MT 28) is an approximately 46.7adj=midNaNadj=mid state highway in the west of the US state of Montana. It begins at MT 200 in Plains and ends at U.S. Highway 93 (US 93) in Elmo; all but the first 7.5miles are within the Flathead Indian Reservation.[1] It serves as a key link in two alternate routes between Spokane, Washington, and Kalispell.

Route description

MT 28 begins at the eastern outskirts of Plains, at an intersection with MT 200. Initially, the highway winds northeasterly as it climbs through steep forest terrain before descending towards the plains again. At the bottom of this ridge, MT 28 heads north as it meets Secondary Highway 382 (S-382), and shortly after that intersects with MT 77, the road to Hot Springs. About 2miles north, it meets Little Bitterroot Road, which connects to S-211 and the city of Ronan. As MT 28 continues north, it briefly enters Lake County and the Niarada area before it crosses into Flathead County and curves eastward across the southernmost and western part of the county. After passing Browns Meadow Road, MT 28 passes through a bighorn sheep crossing area (mileposts 37–40) before it re-enters Lake County. The highway then curves north and descends a final hill before curving east to its northern terminus at US 93 on the north edge of Elmo, overlooking Flathead Lake.

History

MT 28 was originally routed through Hot Springs and Camas as seen on the 1935-36 state maps,[2] [3] with northbound traffic entering Hot Springs at the southwest corner of the city (today's Old Hot Springs Road), turning east on Central Avenue and north on Spring Street, and exiting the northeast corner of the city as it headed north and east to Camas (today's Chisholm Road).

The highway was rerouted along its current alignment east of those communities between Rainbow Lake (approximate milepost 11) and Lonepine during 1937-39 (seen as under construction on the maps),[4] [5] [6] and completed as of the 1940 map.[7] Hot Springs Road was built .c. 1939 to connect Hot Springs to the new routing of MT 28. Traffic for Camas from the new routing follows the old routing west and south on Chisholm Road.

The most recent realignment widened and straightened the section of the highway from northern Sanders County through Flathead County in 2011.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Montana Road Log . Montana Department of Transportation . Montana Department of Transportation . Helena . Montana Department of Transportation . 2013 . PDF . November 30, 2018. 176–7.
  2. Montana State Highway Commission . Montana State Highway Commission . 1935 . State Highway Map . Helena . Montana State Highway Commission . November 30, 2018 .
  3. Montana State Highway Commission . 1936 . State Highway Map . Helena . Montana State Highway Commission . July 14, 2019 .
  4. Montana State Highway Commission . 1937 . State Highway Map . Helena . Montana State Highway Commission . July 14, 2019 .
  5. Montana State Highway Commission . 1938 . State Highway Map . Helena . Montana State Highway Commission . July 14, 2019 .
  6. Montana State Highway Commission . 1939 . State Highway Map . Helena . Montana State Highway Commission . July 14, 2019 .
  7. Montana State Highway Commission . 1940 . State Highway Map . Helena . Montana State Highway Commission . November 30, 2018.