Route information | ||||||||||
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Length | 2,655 mi[1] (4,273 km) | |||||||||
Existed | November 11, 1926[2]–present | |||||||||
Major junctions | ||||||||||
West end | I-10 near Brenda, AZ | |||||||||
I-10 / I-17 in Phoenix, AZ I-25 / US 85 in Socorro, NM I-27 / I-40 / US 87 / US 287 in Amarillo, TX I-35 at Tonkawa, OK I-44 in Vinita, OK I-55 / I-57 in Sikeston, MO I-75 in Lexington, KY I-64 / I-77 in Charleston, WV I-81 southeast of Lexington, VA I-64 in Hampton and Norfolk, VA | ||||||||||
East end | Harbour Point/Rudee Point Rd. in Virginia Beach, VA | |||||||||
Location | ||||||||||
Country | United States | |||||||||
States | Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, West Virginia, Virginia | |||||||||
Highway system | ||||||||||
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U.S. Route 60 is a major east–west United States highway, traveling 2,655 miles (4,273 km) from southwestern Arizona to the Atlantic Ocean coast in Virginia. The highway's eastern terminus is in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where it is known as General Booth Boulevard, just south of the city's Oceanfront resort district at the intersection of Rudee Point Road and Harbor Point. Its original western terminus was in Springfield, Missouri; it was then extended to Los Angeles, California, but in 1964, it was truncated to end southwest of Brenda, Arizona, at an interchange with Interstate 10 (I-10) after the US 60 highway designation was removed from California. I-10 replaced US 60 from Beaumont, California, to Arizona, and California State Route 60 (SR 60) replaced US 60 from Los Angeles to Beaumont.[3]
1926 map
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).