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Oklahoma State Highway 166

State Highway 97 marker

State Highway 97
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length: 19.86 mi (31.96 km)
Existed: February 3, 1952 – present
Major junctions
South end:
US-75 Alt. / SH-33 / SH-66 in Sapulpa
North end: Zink Ranch
Highway system
Oklahoma State Highway System
SH-96 SH-98

State Highway 166
Location: Sapulpa
Length: 0.69 mi (1.11 km)

Ellipse sign 97T.svg

State Highway 97T
Location: Sand Springs
Existed: January 17, 2003–January 2004

State Highway 97 marker

State Highway 97 (abbreviated SH-97) is a 19.86-mile (31.96 km) state highway, maintained by the U.S. state of Oklahoma. It connects two towns in the northeast part of the state: Sapulpa and Sand Springs. Several communities of West Tulsa are along the road between these two towns, including Pretty Water, Allen, and Prattville.

SH-97 has existed since 1952. The highway had a lettered spur, SH-97T, for one year, but it is no longer on the state highway system.

State Highway 97 begins in Sapulpa at an intersection that serves as the terminus of two other highways—U.S. Route 75 Alternate and State Highway 33 (SH-66 also passes through the intersection). From this point, the highway heads north toward the Turner Turnpike (I-44), which it has an interchange with. At the northern outskirts of Sapulpa, it serves as the western terminus of SH-166, a short spur route. The highway then passes through unincorporated areas of northeast Creek County.

At W. 61st Street S., the road crosses into Tulsa County. About one mile (1.6 km) north of the county line, SH-97 enters Prattville, a neighborhood of Sand Springs. At the north end of the town, the highway intersects SH-51 and begins a concurrency with it. The two routes cross the Arkansas River into the main part of Sand Springs together. SH-97 then has an interchange with the Sand Springs Expressway, a freeway which carries US-64 and US-412; SH-51 merges onto the eastbound freeway, bound for downtown Tulsa.


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Wikipedia

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