What this highway is actually called depends
entirely on where you are and who you talk to. Before the creation of
the Okmulgee Beeline, this was part of US-75. It came into Sapulpa and
upon this point along the same road as then-US-66, at which point it
turned and headed south. When the Beeline was created and US-75
rerouted there, the roads between Tulsa
and Okmulgee that were no longer part of US-75 became Alternate-US-75.
My earliest recollections, back in the early 70s, had Alt-75's northern
terminus point here. The rest of the route was already duplexed by
US-66 & SH-33, so a third designation was unnecessary. (Many road
maps, however, still show this highway as Alt-US-75, still going all
the way to Tulsa. Not so. At no point are any part of any 75 and any
part of OK-66 multiplexed.)
Eventually I think the government wanted to do away with the
"Alternate" designation, so the state renamed what was left of the
highway US-75A,
as witnessed by the signs at the northern terminus point (upper left of
the above pics), which have yet to be changed. Most of the signs
along the highway, however, look like the one at upper right, taken at
the SH-67 junction in Kiefer, and lower left, taken between Sapulpa and
Kiefer. As these
are brand new signs, recently replaced due to Kiefer's widening of 67
and
Creek County's not-as-recent resurfacing & slight rerouting of 75A,
it
would be safe to assume that the state officially considers this road
to
be State Highway 75-A.
That is, until you get to Beggs, near the southern end of the highway.
From that point on to the southern terminus at US-75 the highway is
still designated Alternate-US-75, as shown by the picture in the lower
right, taken within the Beggs city limits. In addition, the BGSs on
US-75 designating the exit for this road still refer to it as
Alt-US-75. As this section of road has not has a major overhaul for as
long as I can remember, I would think it safe
to assume that these are just very old signs that aren't going to get
replaced
until they have to be, and that the entire highway, from one end to the
other,
is State Highway 75A.
But until I hear otherwise from somebody in an official capacity with
the state, I have to go by what the signs say. I will overlook the
US-75A signs at the northern terminus as a typo, as that intersection
is the only place where those signs occur. But as "Alternate" signs are
exclusively everywhere from Beggs to the southern terminus, I will
assume that we are actually talking about two totally different
highways: State Highway 75A at the north end, and Alternate-US-75 at
the southern end.
Southern Terminus of Alternate-US-75: US-75 junction
with OK-16.
Left: first assurance shield for Alt-75. Right: Beggs intersection
where Alt-75 duplexes with OK-16.
Transition Point from Alternate-US-75 to OK-75A: Creek/Okmulgee County
Line
(Click on any of the
above pictures for a larger version)
Upper row: View from the county line (Left: looking
south/Right: looking north).
Lower left: First signage of any sort on the highway south of the
county line, designating the road as "Hwy 75 Alt". Between the county
line and Beggs, all street signs for this road are similarly signed.
Lower right: First appearance of any sort of '75' as part of a highway
designation north of the county line, an assurance shield just north of
Mounds. Based on the lower two pics I have been able to determine thie
transition point for the two highways as the county line.
On the map at the top of this page, the blue section is the part of the
road signed OK-75A, the purple section Alt-US-75.
Northern Terminus of OK-75A: corner of Main & Dewey,
Sapulpa's Terminus Junction
Terminus Junction in Sapulpa, where state highways
33, 97 and 75A all end, while 66 passes on through. The view is looking
to
the south, and the beginning of 75A.
Left: another shot of the junction signs in Kiefer. Right: approach
to Terminus Junction from the west.
Terminus Junction pictures taken 8 November 2002. Kiefer night picture
taken 12 October 2002. Kiefer day picture and southern terminus
pictures taken 21 November 2002. Transition point pictures taken 5 July
2003.