U.S. Route 66 | |
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Highway system | |
U.S. Route 66 Alternate |
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Location: | Los Angeles, California |
Existed: | 1938–1964 |
U.S. Route 66 Business |
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Location: | San Bernardino, California |
Business US Highway 66 |
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Location: | Amarillo, Texas |
Existed: | 1954–1985 |
U.S. Route 66 Business |
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Location: | Clinton, Oklahoma |
U.S. Route 66 Business |
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Location: | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma |
U.S. Route 66 Business |
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Location: | Tulsa, Oklahoma |
U.S. Route 66 Alternate |
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Location: | Joplin, Missouri |
U.S. Route 66 Bypass |
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Location: | Joplin, Missouri |
U.S. Route 66 Business |
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Location: | Joplin, Missouri |
There have been 22 special routes of U.S. Route 66.
Alternate U.S. Route 66 was a designation to preserve the next-to-last routing of U.S. 66 from Pasadena, California to Los Angeles, California, when the signage for U.S. 66 was transferred to the Arroyo Seco Parkway (also known as the Pasadena Freeway, with alignment lasted from 1938 to 1964, when Alternate U.S. 66 was eliminated as well as Historic Arroyo Seco Parkway into SR 11, and became SR 110 in 1981.
The routing from Pasadena to Los Angeles was west on Colorado Boulevard and then south on Figueroa Street. The end of the Pasadena Freeway then blended into Figueroa Street and the alternate route rejoined its parent route. The routing along Figueroa Street and the portion along Colorado Boulevard between Linda Vista Avenue and Figueroa Street also bore the designation of State Route 11.