U.S. Route 491: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|U.S. Highway in New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah in the United States}} |
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{{infobox U.S. Route |
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{{Infobox road |
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|article_route=491 |
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|country=USA |
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|type=Secondary |
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|type=US |
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|length_mi=194 |
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|route=491 |
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|length_km=312.2 |
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|maint=[[New Mexico Department of Transportation|NMDOT]], [[Colorado Department of Transportation|CDOT]], [[Utah Department of Transportation|UDOT]] |
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|yrcom=1926/2003 |
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|map={{maplink-road|from=U.S. Route 491.map}} |
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|direction_a=North |
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|map_custom=yes |
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|direction_b=South |
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|map_notes= Map of the Four Corners area with US 491 highlighted in red |
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|from=[[Douglas, Arizona|Douglas]], [[Arizona]] |
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|map_alt=Red line proceeding north–south to the east of Four Corners. |
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|to=[[Monticello, Utah|Monticello]], [[Utah]] |
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|spur_type=US |
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|spur_of=91 |
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|length_mi=193.930 |
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|length_ref=<ref>This figure is derived from summing the three state mileage logs used in the Major intersections section</ref> |
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|history=1926–2003 as US 666<br/>2003–present as US 491<ref name="beastofahighway"/> |
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|tourist=[[Trail of the Ancients Scenic Byway (New Mexico)|Trails of the Ancients Byway]] |
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|direction_a=South |
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|terminus_a={{Jct|state=NM|I|40|NM|602}} in [[Gallup, New Mexico|Gallup, NM]] |
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|junction= |
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*{{Jct|state=NM|US|64}} in [[Shiprock, New Mexico|Shiprock, NM]] |
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*{{Jct|state=CO|US|160}} in [[Cortez, Colorado|Cortez, CO]] |
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|direction_b=North |
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|terminus_b={{Jct|state=UT|US|191}} in [[Monticello, Utah|Monticello, UT]] |
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|states=[[New Mexico]], [[Colorado]], [[Utah]] |
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|counties= '''NM:''' [[McKinley County, New Mexico|McKinley]], [[San Juan County, New Mexico|San Juan]]<br/>'''CO:''' [[Montezuma County, Colorado|Montezuma]], [[Dolores County, Colorado|Dolores]]<br/>'''UT:''' [[San Juan County, Utah|San Juan]] |
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|browse= |
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{{ut browse|previous_type=UT|previous_route=320|route=[[List of Utah State Routes|UT]]|next_type=US|next_route=6}} |
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{{co browse|previous_type=E|previous_route=470|route=[[List of state highways in Colorado|CO]]|next_type=US|next_route=550}} |
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{{nm browse|previous_type=NM|previous_route=485|route=[[List of New Mexico highways|NM]]|next_type=NM|next_route=494}} |
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}} |
}} |
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'''U.S. Route 491''' ('''US 491''') is a north–south [[U.S. Highway]] serving the [[Four Corners]] region of the United States. It was created in 2003 as a renumbering of '''U.S. Route 666''' ('''US 666'''). With the US 666 designation, the road was nicknamed the "Devil's Highway" because of the significance of the number [[666 (number)|666]] to many [[Christianity|Christian]] denominations as the [[Number of the beast|Number of the Beast]].<ref name="beastofahighway">{{cite web |url= https://highways.dot.gov/highway-history/general-highway-history/us-666-beast-highway |title= US 666: Beast of a Highway? |work= Highway History |access-date= November 17, 2007 |last= Weingroff |first= Richard F. |date= June 18, 2003 |publisher= [[Federal Highway Administration]] }}</ref> This [[Satan]]ic connotation, combined with a high fatality rate along the New Mexico portion, convinced some people the highway was cursed. The problem was compounded by persistent [[Street sign theft|sign theft]]. These factors led to two efforts to renumber the highway, first by officials in [[Arizona]], then by those in [[New Mexico]]. There have been safety improvement projects since the renumbering, and fatality rates have subsequently decreased.<ref name=nmdot2/> |
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The highway, now a spur route of [[U.S. Route 91|US 91]] via its connection to [[U.S. Route 191|US 191]], runs through [[New Mexico]], [[Colorado]] and [[Utah]], as well as the tribal nations of the [[Navajo Nation]] and [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe]]. The highway passes by two mountains considered sacred by Native Americans: [[Ute Mountain]] and an extinct volcanic core named [[Shiprock]]. Other features along the route include [[Mesa Verde National Park]] and [[Dove Creek, Colorado|Dove Creek]], Colorado, the self-proclaimed pinto-bean capital of the world. |
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'''U.S. Route 491''' is a north-south [[United States highway]]. One of the newest additions to the U.S. Highway system, it was commissioned in [[2003]] as a renumbering of '''U.S. Route 666''' (an original [[1926]] route). Although the next 3-digit "child" of [[U.S. Route 91]] would have been U.S. Route 291, both the 291 and 391 designations were already in use as state route numbers <ref name="beastofahighway">[http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/infrastructure/us666.htm U.S. 666: "Beast of a Highway"?] by Richard F. Weingroff ([[United States Department of Transportation|USDOT]] - [[Federal Highway Administration|FHWA]])</ref>. |
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==Route description== |
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The old U.S. Route 666 is a well-constructed roadway, travelling through some scenic areas of [[Arizona]], [[New Mexico]] and [[Colorado]]. With the 666 designation, this route was given the nickname, "The Devil's Highway" despite the fact that large portions of the highway passed over territories largely populated by American Indians, including many traditionals, who did not have the Christian association of the number with the [[Bible|biblical]] [[Number of the Beast (numerology)|Number of the Beast]]. This made some people uncomfortable, as well as making the signs targets for [[Street sign theft|theft]]. In [[1993]], the part in [[Arizona]] was renamed as an extension of [[U.S. Route 191]]; the rest became U.S. Route 491 in [[2003]], mainly through efforts of New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson. |
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US 491 serves the states of New Mexico, Colorado and Utah. Before 1992, US 666 also served Arizona. The Arizona portion was renumbered separately and is now part of [[U.S. Route 191|US 191]].<ref name=quepasa>{{cite journal |author= Staff |url= http://dot.state.nm.us/upload/images/Que_Pasa/quepasa5.pdf |title= The Devil's Gone On US 491 |journal= Qué Pasa |access-date= May 15, 2008 |date=January 2005 |page= 1 |publisher= New Mexico Department of Transportation |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090225143501/http://dot.state.nm.us/upload/images/Que_Pasa/quepasa5.pdf |archive-date= February 25, 2009}}</ref> The former US 666 was the only highway to have passed through each of the Four Corners states, even though it never came near the [[Four Corners Monument]], which is accessed via [[U.S. Route 160|US 160]].<ref name=AAA>{{cite map |publisher= American Automobile Association |title= Western States <!--|url= http://www.aaa.com--> |edition= 1979 |year= 1979 |scale= 1 in = 40 mi}}</ref> At several points along US 491, mountain ranges in all of the Four Corners states are visible from a single location. The alignment of the highway is mostly north–south, however the Utah portion was signed east–west.<ref name=utahlaw/> |
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===New Mexico=== |
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[[Image:US_666.svg|right|100px]] |
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[[File:US 491 (former US 666) sign in Gallup NM.jpg|thumb|Gallup, New Mexico|alt=A US 491 shield with a custom green shield reading "Former 666".]] |
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U.S. Route 491 passes through the heart of the [[Navajo Nation|Navajo Indian Reservation]] passing many small communities, trading posts, and schools, including the major complex of [[Shiprock]], and then crosses into the [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Ute]] in the extreme southwestern corner of Colorado, passing between [[Mesa Verde]] and [[Ute Mountain]] and joining with U.S. Route 160 at [[Cortez, Colorado|Cortez]], [[Colorado]] to continue north and west through the bean-farming lands of [[Montezuma County, Colorado|Montezuma County]], Colorado and [[Dolores County, Colorado|Dolores County]], Colorado into [[San Juan County, Utah|San Juan County]], Utah where it terminates at [[Monticello, Utah|Monticello]], [[Utah]] at the base of the [[Abajo Mountains]] (Blue Mountains). |
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US 491 begins at [[Gallup, New Mexico|Gallup]], at a junction with [[Interstate 40 in New Mexico|Interstate 40]] (I-40), and currently runs north along Muñoz Drive.<ref name=nmroutelog/> The routing has changed to bypass the downtown area. The original route used 9th Street, starting at [[U.S. Route 66 (New Mexico)|US 66]].<ref>{{cite map |author= [[United States Geological Survey]] |year=1954 |title=Gallup, New Mexico; Arizona |type = Topographic map |scale=1:250,000 |location = Reston, Virginia |publisher = United States Geological Survey }}</ref> US 491 leaves Gallup and passes north through the eastern half of the [[Navajo Nation]].<ref name=navajotourism>{{cite web |url= http://www.discovernavajo.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=26&Itemid=61 |title= Discover Navajo: People of the Fourth World |access-date= November 17, 2007 |author= Navajo Tourism Department |publisher= [[Navajo Nation]] Department of Information Technology |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071030174928/http://www.discovernavajo.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=26&Itemid=61 |archive-date= October 30, 2007}}</ref> Along the way, the road passes through the small tribal communities and trading posts of [[Tohatchi, New Mexico|Tohatchi]], [[Buffalo Springs, New Mexico|Buffalo Springs]], [[Naschitti, New Mexico|Naschitti]], [[Sheep Springs, New Mexico|Sheep Springs]] and [[Newcomb, New Mexico|Newcomb]].<ref name=nmdot/> The Navajo tribal capital at [[Window Rock, Arizona]], is just west of the highway corridor, accessed by [[New Mexico State Road 264|State Road 264]] (NM 264). The largest city served by US 491 is [[Shiprock, New Mexico|Shiprock]], which takes its name from one of several [[Shiprock|extinct volcano core]]s in the area. Shiprock is known as "the winged rock" in the Navajo language, and the mountain is considered sacred by the Navajo people.<ref>{{cite journal |journal= American Cowboy |publisher= Active Interest Media |date=November 2002 |issn= 1079-3690 |page= 44 |title= Beyond Borders}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Old US 666 New US 491.JPG|thumb|right|Old and new route number posted near the terminus in Monticello]] |
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Shiprock is where the US 491 crosses the [[San Juan River (Colorado River)|San Juan River]] and is briefly [[concurrency (road)|concurrent]] with [[U.S. Route 64|US 64]]. After passing Shiprock, the route continues north to the Colorado state line. The New Mexico portion has been designated the "[[John Pinto]] Highway" by the New Mexico state legislature.<ref name=nmdot>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://www.us491.com/ProjectDescription.cfm |title= US 666 Corridor Highway |publisher= New Mexico Department of Transportation |access-date= June 12, 2008 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090107033840/http://www.us491.com/ProjectDescription.cfm |archive-date= January 7, 2009 }}</ref> |
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It is on the [[Trail of the Ancients Scenic Byway (New Mexico)|Trails of the Ancients Byway]], one of the designated [[New Mexico Scenic Byways]].<ref name="NM TOA">{{cite web|author=Staff |url=http://www.newmexico.org/trail-of-the-ancients/ |title=Trail of the Ancients |publisher=New Mexico Tourism Department |access-date=August 14, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140821002106/http://www.newmexico.org/trail-of-the-ancients/ |archive-date=August 21, 2014 }}</ref> |
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==Termini== |
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As of [[2004]], the highway's northern terminus is in [[Monticello, Utah|Monitcello]], [[Utah]] at an intersection with [[U.S. Route 191]]. This intersection is the basis for this route's x91 number. Its southern terminus is in [[Gallup, New Mexico|Gallup]], [[New Mexico]] at an intersection with [[Interstate 40]] (historic [[U.S. Route 66]]). |
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===Colorado=== |
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[[File:MesaVerdeNationalParkCliffPalace.jpg|thumb|Visitors touring [[Mesa Verde National Park]], along US 491|alt=a group of people observing Indian ruins located in a cave.]] |
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*When the route was first commissioned in [[1926]], its northern terminus was in [[Cortez, Colorado|Cortez]], [[Colorado]] at an intersection with [[U.S. Route 450]] (modern [[U.S. Route 160]]). It extended south to Gallup, New Mexico, one of the famous stops on the original U.S. Route 66, the "parent" of U.S. Route 666. The north-south route was technically a violation of the numbering convention that even-numbered routes run east-west. But the short route didn't intersect any odd-numbered U.S. routes at the time. |
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The New Mexico-Colorado state line is where the highway passes from the Navajo Nation to [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Ute]] tribal lands. The highway passes to the east of the tribe's namesake, [[Ute Mountain]], believed to belong to a great warrior god of the Ute People.<ref>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://www.utemountainute.com/legends.htm |title= Ute Mountain Ute telling of the Legend of the Sleeping Ute |work= Legends and Children's Stories of the Ute Tribe |publisher= Ute Mountain Ute Tribe |year= 1999 |access-date= November 26, 2008 }}</ref> US 491 proceeds diagonally to the northwest in the extreme southwestern corner of the state.<ref name=utemountaincasino>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://www.utemountaincasino.com/map.html |title= Ute Mountain Casino |access-date= November 17, 2007 |publisher= Ute Mountain Ute Tribe |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071025061912/http://www.utemountaincasino.com/map.html |archive-date= October 25, 2007 }}</ref> The highway exits tribal lands near [[Cortez, Colorado|Cortez]] and [[Mesa Verde National Park]]. After leaving Cortez, the road gradually rises in elevation while proceeding towards Utah. Here, the route features large pinto bean farming regions including Dove Creek, which bills itself as the "pinto bean capital of the world".<ref name=COhistory>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://www.coloradohistory.org/ripsigns/show_markertext.asp?id=861 |title= Dove Creek |access-date= May 13, 2008 |publisher= Colorado Historical Society |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20101028183719/http://coloradohistory.org/RIPsigns/show_markertext.asp?id=861 |archive-date= October 28, 2010}}</ref> [[Canyons of the Ancients National Monument]] is located along the ascent, just west of the highway. Along this ascent is an access road for [[Hovenweep National Monument]] at the state line. A portion of the road in Colorado has been designated the [[Trail of the Ancients]], a [[National Scenic Byway]], which uses US 491 as an access for these parks and monuments in southwest Colorado.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.byways.org/explore/byways/2597/ |title= Trail of the Ancients |access-date= November 21, 2007 |work= America's Byways |publisher= Federal Highway Administration |author= Staff}}</ref> |
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===Utah=== |
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*In [[1938]], its southern terminus was extended to [[Douglas, Arizona|Douglas]], [[Arizona]] at the [[Mexico|Mexican]] border. It was co-signed with U.S. Route 66 for 30 miles (48.3 km) before its turn south. |
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Once in Utah, US 491 gradually ascends to the [[Abajo Mountains]]. Still visible are large farming regions. Upon reaching an elevation of {{convert|7000|ft|m}}, the highway arrives at a [[weigh station]] and reaches the town of [[Monticello, Utah|Monticello]]. US 491 enters the town on Central Street and terminates near the city park at an intersection with [[U.S. Route 191 (Utah)|US 191]], which runs along Main Street.<ref name=benchmark>{{cite map |publisher= Benchmark Maps |title= Utah Road and Recreation Atlas |year= 2002 |scale= 1:250000 |page= 79 |section= F8 |isbn= 0-929591-74-7 }}</ref> All highways in Utah are codified into law; US 491 is defined at Utah Code Annotated §72-4-137(11).<ref name=utahlaw>{{cite web |url= http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE72/htm/72_04_013700.htm |title= Utah Code Annotated |publisher= State of Utah |access-date= May 15, 2008 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080711120045/http://le.utah.gov/~code/TITLE72/htm/72_04_013700.htm |archive-date= July 11, 2008 }}</ref> |
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==History== |
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*In [[1970]], [[U.S. Route 160]] at Cortez, Colorado was rerouted south to serve the [[Four Corners Monument]]. U.S. Route 666 was extended up part of the old route of U.S. 160 to Monticello, Utah, at an intersection with then [[U.S. Route 163]] (now [[U.S. Route 191]]) which took over the route northerly from there to the intersection with [[U.S. Route 6]] and [[U.S. Route 50]]. (U.S. Route 163 went south from there to the redesignated U.S. 160 in Arizona.) These redesignations of U.S. Route 160 as a U.S. Route 666 extension and U.S. 163 creation would foreshadow the final fate of U.S. 666. |
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===Pre-1926=== |
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[[File:Abajo Mts LR.jpg|thumb|left|The [[Abajo Mountains]] near Monticello|alt=Snow-covered mountains protruding from a plain with tilled soil in the foreground.]]Before the [[Mexican–American War]], when this area was ceded to the United States, the main trade route through this part of Mexico was the [[Old Spanish Trail (trade route)|Old Spanish Trail]]. This trail extended from [[Santa Fe, New Mexico|Santa Fe]], New Mexico to Los Angeles. The trail had multiple routes; however, the main route proceeded north towards [[Moab, Utah|Moab]], Utah, one of the few places where the [[Colorado River]] can be crossed without having to traverse steep cliffs. The modern US 491 roughly correlates with the main route of the Old Spanish Trail between [[Cortez, Colorado|Cortez]], Colorado and its northern terminus.<ref name=oldspanishtrail>{{cite web |url= http://www.oldspanishtrail.org/trail_history.php |title= Old Spanish Trail History |access-date= March 19, 2008 |last= von Till Warren |first= Elizabeth |publisher= Old Spanish Trail Association |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080308045310/http://www.oldspanishtrail.org/trail_history.php |archive-date= March 8, 2008}}</ref> |
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Before 1926, all of modern US 491 existed as state routes. In New Mexico, US 666 absorbed a portion of [[New Mexico State Road 32|State Road 32]] (NM 32) from Gallup to Shiprock, and completely replaced NM 121 from Shiprock to the Colorado state line.<ref name=broernm>{{cite map |url= http://www.broermapsonline.org/online/NorthAmerica/UnitedStates/Southwest/NewMexico/unitedstates1926ra_061.html |title= Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas |year= 1926 |publisher= Rand McNally |page= 69 |access-date= June 26, 2008}}</ref> The portion in Colorado was numbered State Highway 106 (SH 106) from the New Mexico state line to Cortez, and [[Colorado State Highway 10|SH 10]] from Cortez to Utah.<ref name=broerco>{{cite map |url= http://www.broermapsonline.org/online/NorthAmerica/UnitedStates/NorthernRockies/Colorado/unitedstates1926ra_062.html |title= Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas |year= 1926 |publisher= Rand McNally |page= 70 |access-date= June 26, 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite map |url=https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~33765~1171481:Colorado |title= Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas |year= 1927 |publisher= Rand McNally |page= 68 |access-date= April 1, 2023}}</ref> At the time, SH 10 traversed the southern portion of Colorado. While most of this corridor today has a U.S. Highway designation, a portion of SH 10 still exists.<ref name=gmwalsenburg>{{cite map |publisher=DeLorme |title=Colorado Atlas and Gazateer |year=2002 |place=Yarmouth, Maine |isbn=0899332889 |page=52-53}}</ref> In Utah, the route was originally numbered [[Utah State Route 9|State Route 9]] (SR 9), which also included what is now US 191 from Monticello to Crescent Junction. Utah has since re-used the SR 9 designation for a different road.<ref name=UTSR9>{{UDOT Resolutions |routenum=9 |access-date= April 2, 2012}}</ref> |
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===U.S. Route 666=== |
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*In [[1985]], the U.S. Route 66 designation was eliminated. In [[1993]], Arizona requested [[American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials|AASHTO]] to allow the state's segment of U.S. Route 666 to be redesignated as a southern extension of U.S. Route 191. This truncated U.S. Route 666 again at Gallup, New Mexico, now at Interstate 40. U.S. Route 191 was extended from its truncated former southern end, through [[Yellowstone National Park]], replacing [[U.S. Route 189]] in [[Wyoming]], over previous state routes in Wyoming and Utah, then taking over most of U.S. Route 163 and then heading over new roadway and previous state routes to the Arizona U.S. Route 666 segments. |
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{{Infobox road small |
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|country=USA |
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|type=US |
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|route=666 |
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|location=[[Gallup, New Mexico|Gallup, NM]] – [[Monticello, Utah|Monticello, UT]] |
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|formed=1926 |
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|deleted=2003 |
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}} |
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The route was upgraded to a [[U.S. Highway]] in 1926, as U.S. Route 666. This number was appropriate and in accordance with the road numbering guidelines for U.S. Highways, being the sixth spur along the highway's parent highway, the famed cross-continental highway [[U.S. Route 66]], from which US 491 breaks around [[Gallup, New Mexico|Gallup]], New Mexico. This number was assigned by the [[American Association of State Highway Officials]] (AASHO), a coordinating body that created the U.S. Highway System.<ref name="beastofahighway" /> At that time, the northern terminus of the route was in Cortez, at an intersection with then [[U.S. Route 450|US 450]] (modern [[U.S. Route 160|US 160]]).<ref name=1926map>{{cite map |author1= [[Bureau of Public Roads]] |author2= [[American Association of State Highway Officials]] |date= November 11, 1926 |title= United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials |url= https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:United_States_System_of_Highways_Adopted_for_Uniform_Marking_by_the_American_Association_of_State_Highway_Officials.jpg |scale= 1:7,000,000 |location= Washington, DC |publisher= [[United States Geological Survey]] |oclc= 32889555 |access-date= November 7, 2013 |via= [[Wikimedia Commons]] |name-list-style= amp}}</ref> |
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[[File:USA Route666 UT.jpg|thumb|left|Old and new route number at the intersection with US 191 in Monticello|alt=Sign assembly with 4 signs:Top left – Old US 666, Top right – New US 491, Bottom Left – North US 191 straight ahead, Bottom Right – US 491 Right turn]] |
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*On [[January 21]], [[2003]], [[Governor#United_States|Governor]] [[Bill Richardson (politician)|Bill Richardson]] of New Mexico declared his intent to change the designation of U.S. 666 due to "infamy brought by the inopportune naming of the road." <ref name="beastofahighway" /> Officials in Colorado and Utah concurred, choosing "U.S. Route 393" as the route number. But since the route came nowhere near [[U.S. Route 93]], AASHTO suggested U.S. Route 491, noting it as a "branch" of U.S. Route 191 because the routes meet in Monticello, Utah. U.S. Route 666 officially ceased to exist on [[May 31]], [[2003]], though "New 491 - Old 666" signs would be posted for at least a year. |
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Over time the route became known as the "Devil's Highway", a reference to the [[Number of the beast|Number of the Beast]].<ref name=saltlaketribune/> This nickname and association made some visitors uncomfortable,<ref name="nationalgeographic">{{cite journal |last= MGZ |date=December 2003 |title= Its Number Was Up |journal= [[National Geographic Magazine]]}}</ref> as well as making the signs targets for [[Street sign theft|theft]].<ref name="nytimes2"/> Because of the highway's number, accidents and other phenomena, this became repeated as legend. These legends convinced some people the highway was cursed.<ref name=abqjournal>{{cite news |url= http://www.abqjournal.com/quirky/67534news07-31-03.htm |title= It's Now US 491, Not US 666 |last= Linthicum |first= Leslie |work= Albuquerque Journal |date= July 31, 2003}}</ref> One unnamed highway patrol officer was quoted in ''[[USA Today]]'' as stating a drunk-driving suspect told him, "Triple 6 is evil. Everyone dies on that highway."<ref name="beastofahighway" /> Skeptics point out that the highway has a lower than average fatality rate in Utah and Colorado;<ref name="nytimes">{{cite news |url= https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9506E3D71E39F930A25755C0A9659C8B63 |title= Journeys; The End of the Road For 'Devil's Highway' |access-date= April 12, 2007 |last= Wilgoren |first = Jodi |date= June 13, 2003 |work= The New York Times}}</ref> only the New Mexico portion is statistically a dangerous highway.<ref name=abqjournal/> Skeptics further state the high fatality rate in New Mexico can be explained by an inadequate design for the traffic loads at the time.<ref>{{cite web |publisher = [[Indian Country Today]] |url=https://ictnews.org/archive/devils-highway-navajos-grapple-with-one-of-most-dangerous-roads-in-us |title='Devil's Highway': Navajos Grapple With One of Most Dangerous Roads in US |first=Alysa |last=Landry |
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|date=June 21, 2015 |access-date=January 26, 2023}}</ref> During the renumbering debate, the ''[[Albuquerque Journal]]'' opined that the planned highway improvements would do more to reduce fatalities than the renumbering itself.<ref name=abqjournal/> |
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The curse of US 666 is briefly discussed in Jonathan D. Rosenblum's book, ''Copper Crucible'', which investigates the [[Arizona Copper Mine Strike of 1983]]. This strike occurred along the highway near [[Morenci, Arizona|Morenci]], Arizona.<ref name=coppercrucible>{{cite book |last= Rosenblum |first= Jonathan D. |title= Copper Crucible |year= 1998 |edition= 2nd |url= http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=3447 |publisher= [[Cornell University]] Press |isbn = 978-0-8014-8554-1}}</ref> The highway was used as a plot element in films and television, including ''[[Route 666 (film)|Route 666]]'', ''[[Natural Born Killers]]'',<ref name=beastofahighway/> and ''[[Repo Man (film)|Repo Man]]'', as well as a two-part episode of the series ''[[Married... with Children]]'', titled "Route 666".<ref name=sonypictures>{{cite web |url= http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&productId=20500102 |title= Married... with Children: Complete Season 5 DVD |publisher= Sony Electronics Inc. |access-date= June 14, 2008 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110616021239/http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?catalogId=10551&storeId=10151&langId=-1&productId=20500102 |archive-date= June 16, 2011 }}</ref> These pieces are not accurate in portraying the route; for example, one depicts the route in [[Nevada]].<ref name=sonypictures/> |
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==States traversed== |
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{{Clear}} |
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The highway passes through the following states: |
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* [[Utah]] ([[1938]]-) |
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* [[Colorado]] ([[1926]]-) |
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* [[New Mexico]] ([[1926]]-) |
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* [[Arizona]] ([[1926]]-[[1993]]) |
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===Extensions into Arizona and Utah=== |
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==Related U.S. routes== |
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{{see also|U.S. Route 191 in Arizona#U.S. Route 666}} |
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[[File:PHELPS DODGE CORP. MINE AND SMELTER - NARA - 543988.tif|thumb|US 666 through [[Morenci, Arizona]] in June 1972]] |
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* [[U.S. Route 191]] |
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On December 4, 1938, the southern terminus of the route was extended from Gallup across the [[Arizona]] state line to [[U.S. Route 80|US 80]] in [[Douglas, Arizona|Douglas]], near the Mexican border.<ref name="AASHTO 1938">{{AASHTO minutes|year=1938S|v-link=yes|page=53|access-date=June 15, 2023|quote=U.S. 666 was extended from Gallup, New Mexico via Lupton (Arizona), Sanders, St. Johns, Clifton, Safford, Bowie Junction; thence over State Route 81 to Douglas. (Minutes of Executive Committee, December 4, 1938, Dallas, Texas)}}</ref> It ran [[concurrency (road)|concurrent]] with US 66 for 30 miles (48.3 km) before the turn south.<ref name=beastofahighway/> Prior to the extension, the route between Douglas and Sanders was designated as [[Arizona State Route 81 (1927–1938)|SR 81]].<ref name="ASHD1939">{{Cite web |url=https://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/nodes/view/158901 |title=History of the Arizona State Highway Department |author=Arizona State Highway Department and United States Public Roads Administration |date=June 1939 |format=PDF |via=Arizona Memory Project |access-date=May 18, 2023}}</ref> The Arizona portion of the highway is known as the [[Coronado Trail Scenic Byway]], as it approximated the path of the Spanish explorer, [[Francisco Vásquez de Coronado]].<ref name="coronado">{{cite web |url= http://www.byways.org/explore/byways/2059/ |title= Coronado Trail Scenic Byway |access-date= November 17, 2007 |work= America's Byways |publisher= Federal Highway Administration |author= Staff}}</ref> This portion is noted for mountainous terrain, with [[hairpin turn]]s and steep grades, that reaches an altitude of over {{convert|9000|ft|m|sigfig=2}}. The curves force a speed limit of {{convert|10|mph|km/h}} in spots.<ref name=beastofahighway/> |
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* [[U.S. Route 66]] ("Route 66") |
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* [[U.S. Route 166]] |
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* [[U.S. Route 266]] |
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* [[U.S. Route 366]] |
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* [[U.S. Route 466]] |
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* [[U.S. Route 566]] |
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In 1970, several U.S. Highways in the Four Corners region were re-aligned. As part of this change, US 160 was rerouted west of [[Cortez, Colorado|Cortez]] to serve the [[Four Corners Monument]] and enter Arizona instead of Utah.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=Arizona Department of Transportation |url=https://azdot.gov/adot-blog/highway-history-navajo-route-1-us-160 |title=Highway History: From Navajo Route 1 to US 160 |first=David |last=Rookhuyzen |date=January 20, 2020 |access-date=January 25, 2023}}</ref> US 666 was extended up part of the old route of US 160 to [[Monticello, Utah]], at an intersection with then [[U.S. Route 163|US 163]] (now [[U.S. Route 191|US 191]]).<ref name=resolutions>{{UDOT Resolutions |routenum=163 |access-date= April 2, 2012}}</ref> |
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==External links== |
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* [http://www.geocities.com/usend9099/End491/end491.htm Endpoints of U.S. highways - U.S. 491] |
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In 1985, the [[Utah Department of Transportation]] petitioned to extend US 666 northwest to [[Richfield, Utah|Richfield]], but the proposal was rejected. The proposed extension followed [[Utah State Route 95|SR 95]], [[Utah State Route 24|SR 24]], and [[Utah State Route 119|SR 119]]. A concurrency with US 191 would have been routed through [[Blanding, Utah|Blanding]] and Monticello to connect to the rest of the route. One of the reasons cited for rejecting the proposal was that portions of SR 24 were not built to standards desired for additions to the U.S. Highway System.<ref name=extend666>{{UDOT Resolutions |routenum=666 |access-date= April 2, 2012}}</ref> |
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* [http://www.geocities.com/usend6069/End666/end666.htm Endpoints of U.S. highways - U.S. 666] |
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{{Clear}} |
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===Elimination and renumbering of US 666=== |
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[[File:Shiprock.snodgrass3.jpg|thumb|[[Shiprock]], a sacred mountain to the Navajo people, is accessed via US 491|alt=Solid rock spire protruding from the desert.]] |
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In 1985, the US 66 designation was eliminated, leaving US 666 (and other routes) as "orphans". This fact would be used as a supporting factor in later petitions to renumber the highway. In 1992, the part in Arizona was renumbered as an extension of US 191. This truncated US 666 again at Gallup, New Mexico, now at [[Interstate 40 (New Mexico)|I-40]].<ref name=quepasa/> |
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The route in the other three states became U.S. Route 491 in 2003, mainly through efforts of New Mexico Governor [[Bill Richardson]]. He requested the change due to the "infamy brought by the inopportune naming of the road".<ref name="beastofahighway" /> While campaigning for governor, Richardson promised to renumber the highway as part of a larger plan to improve the highway and build relations between New Mexico and the Navajo Nation.<ref name=saltlaketribune/> Although traditional [[Navajo people|Navajo culture]] does not share the belief of 666 being an evil number, some Navajos had attempted for years to change the number as a way to raise awareness about the dangerous highway.<ref name=abqjournal/> The highway had largely been ignored, with few improvements made since it was first paved.<ref name=saltlaketribune/> By 1997, US 666 was named one of the 20 most dangerous highways in the United States.<ref name=abqjournal/> Some Navajo leaders were concerned that efforts to reduce poverty on Navajo lands, via promoting tourism and outside investment, were being hampered by the Christian aversion to the number.<ref name=beastofahighway/> |
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In New Mexico's motion to renumber the highway, they selected U.S. Route 393. Since the route came nowhere near [[U.S. Route 93|US 93]], [[American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials|AASHTO]] instead suggested US 491, noting it as a branch of US 191 at Monticello, Utah. Although the next three-digit child of [[U.S. Route 91|US 91]] would have been U.S. Route 291, both the 291 and 391 designations were already in use as state route numbers in at least one of the affected states.<ref name=beastofahighway/> At the news that the motion had passed, a New Mexico spokesperson stated, "The devil's out of here, and we say goodbye and good riddance."<ref name="abqjournal"/> Referring to the motion passing with a different number from what New Mexico requested, another spokesperson responded, "As long as it's not 666 and it's nothing satanic, that's OK."<ref name=beastofahighway/> US 666 officially ceased to exist on May 31, 2003, although temporary "New 491 – Old 666" signs were posted after the change to aid travelers using old maps.<ref name="abqjournal"/> |
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[[File:Utemountain.JPG|thumb|[[Ute Mountain]], in southwest Colorado, is the sacred mountain, and namesake of the [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe]]|alt=Mountain range with one prominent peak in the center left of the photograph.]] |
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Although sign theft had always been a problem along this highway, thefts reached epidemic proportions when the pending number change was announced. Within days of the announcement, virtually every US 666 sign had been stolen, some for sale on [[eBay]].<ref name="sttimes">{{cite news |url= http://www.sptimes.com/2003/07/20/Worldandnation/US_666_is_gone__but_s.shtml |title= US 666 is gone, but signs went first |access-date= May 1, 2019 |first= Susan Taylor |last= Marten |date= July 20, 2003 |work= St. Petersburg Times |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20160303193840/http://www.sptimes.com/2003/07/20/Worldandnation/US_666_is_gone__but_s.shtml |archive-date= March 3, 2016 }}</ref> Officials in Utah reported that five entire sign assemblies had been cut down with a chainsaw and stolen, while New Mexico officials reported that even signs welded to metal posts, as a theft deterrent, had been stolen. Officials speculated from one scene that someone had intentionally crashed a car into the sign post to break the welds.<ref name="nytimes2">{{cite news |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/20/us/renaming-us-666-prompts-a-run-on-satanic-souvenirs.html |title= Renaming US 666 Prompts a Run on 'Satanic' Souvenirs |page= 20 |agency= Associated Press |access-date= November 17, 2007 |date= July 20, 2003 |work= The New York Times |url-status= |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080327030405/http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9503E4D71E3CF933A15754C0A9659C8B63&n=Top%2FReference%2FTimes%20Topics%2FSubjects%2FS%2FSigns%20and%20Symbols |archive-date= March 27, 2008 }}</ref> |
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The dedication of the "new" highway was postponed until July 30, 2003, to coincide with the start of construction projects to improve safety on the highway.<ref name="saltlaketribune">{{cite news |title= Sixes nixed on 'devil's road' |first= Christopher |last= Smart |date= July 30, 2003 |work= Salt Lake Tribune |page= A1 |url= https://newspapers.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s64b88cg/27902822 |via= [[J. Willard Marriott Library]] |accessdate= March 27, 2023}}</ref> At the dedication George Blue Horse, a Navajo medicine man, performed a ceremony to remove the curse from the highway. In the Navajo language he stated, "The road itself never ends. It goes on generation to generation. The new number is a good one. The new road will be a medicine."<ref name=abqjournal/> |
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Newspapers and television stations interviewed people along the route about their opinions on the changing of the highway's number. Even some people who believed in the 666 curse disagreed with the change. One went on record as stating highway officials, "are messing with the wrong guy. They're making the devil mad. They should have left the 666 alone." Others were more sarcastic. One Monticello resident stated, "We'll really miss all the potheads stopping and taking pictures of the Route 666 sign." Most residents took pride in living along the Devil's Highway and opposed the change. Some commented that no matter the number they would still call the road the Devil's Highway.<ref name="saltlaketribune" /> |
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===Post-renumbering=== |
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Since the renumbering in 2003, portions of US 491 in New Mexico have been upgraded to a four-lane [[divided highway]], with [[grade separation]]s at the busiest interchanges. The New Mexico Department of Transportation has noted that, as sections are upgraded, fatality rates improve on the four-lane portions, but remain high on the two-lane portions. As construction has proceeded, the most dangerous portions of the highway have moved to points where the four-lane portion ends, and traffic merges to two lanes. This has caused the department to coordinate the phases of the upgrades to minimize the number of two-lane/four-lane transitions.<ref name=nmdot2>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://www.us491.com/documents/US491_S_EA_text.pdf |title= Environmental Assessment US 491 South Corridor phase B MP 15 to MP 46 |publisher= New Mexico Department of Transportation |year= 2006 |access-date= June 12, 2008 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090225143501/http://www.us491.com/documents/US491_S_EA_text.pdf |archive-date= February 25, 2009 }}</ref> Construction on the final phase was originally scheduled to begin January 2008,<ref name=nmdot/> however the state applied for [[American Recovery and Reinvestment Act]] funds to finish the project and completion was delayed until 2012.<ref name=tiger>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://www.nmshtd.state.nm.us/upload/images/ARRA/stimulus/TIGER/US%20491/FINAL%20US%20491%20Tiger%20Application_091509.pdf |title= American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Tiger Discretionary Grant Application for US 491 Roadway Widening |publisher= Navajo Nation Department of Transportation; New Mexico Department of Transportation |date= September 14, 2009 |access-date= June 29, 2011 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110916233701/http://nmshtd.state.nm.us/upload/images/ARRA/stimulus/TIGER/US%20491/FINAL%20US%20491%20Tiger%20Application_091509.pdf |archive-date= September 16, 2011 }}</ref> |
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==Major intersections== |
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'''Note:''' The Utah mileposts are posted in a west-to-east direction, while Colorado's and New Mexico's mileposts are posted in a south-to-north direction. |
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{{jcttop|unnum=yes|length_ref=<ref name=nmroutelog>{{cite map |url= http://nmshtd.state.nm.us/upload/images/Maps/pdf/SW_V9_2_ELEV_RB_2007.pdf |format= PDF |title= New Mexico Department of Transportation Mile Post Map |access-date= March 1, 2008 |publisher= New Mexico Department of Transportation |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110723001113/http://nmshtd.state.nm.us/upload/images/Maps/pdf/SW_V9_2_ELEV_RB_2007.pdf |archive-date= July 23, 2011 }}</ref><ref name=coroutelog>{{cite web |author= Staff |url= http://apps.coloradodot.info/dataaccess/Highways/index.cfm?fuseaction=Description&route=491&begRefPt=0&endRefPt=500&Printable=trueMenuType=Highways |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120526142118/http://apps.coloradodot.info/dataaccess/Highways/index.cfm?fuseaction=Description&route=491&begRefPt=0&endRefPt=500&Printable=trueMenuType=Highways |url-status= dead |archive-date= May 26, 2012 |title= Highways Data |access-date= March 1, 2008 |publisher= Colorado Department of Transportation }}</ref><ref name=utroutelog>{{UDOT Reference Info |route=US-491 |access-date= March 1, 2008}}</ref>|state_col=state}} |
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{{NMint |
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|sspan=5 |
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|county=McKinley |
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|cspan=2 |
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|location=Gallup |
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|mile=0.000 |
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|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|602|dir1=south|city1=Zuni Pueblo}}<br/>{{Jct|state=NM|I|40|city1=Albuquerque|location2=[[Flagstaff, Arizona|Flagstaff]]}} |
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|notes=Southern terminus; I-40 exit 20; road continues beyond I-40 as NM 602}} |
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{{NMint |
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|location=Yah-ta-hey |
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|mile=7.002 |
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|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|264|dir1=west}} |
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|notes=Interchange; left exit northbound, left entrances}} |
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{{NMint |
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|county=San Juan |
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|cspan=3 |
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|location=Sheep Springs |
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|mile=47.250 |
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|road={{Jct|state=NM|NM|134|dir1=west|city1=Crystal}} |
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|notes=}} |
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{{NMint |
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|location=Shiprock |
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|lspan=2 |
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|mile=91.186 |
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|type=concur |
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|road={{Jct|state=NM|US|64|dir1=west|location1=[[Teec Nos Pos, Arizona|Teec Nos Pos]]}} |
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|notes=South end of US 64 overlap; former NM 504}} |
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{{NMint |
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|mile=92.038 |
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|type=concur |
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|road={{Jct|state=NM|US|64|dir1=east|city1=Farmington}} |
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|notes=North end of US 64 overlap}} |
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{{jctplace |
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|river_wide=yes |
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|river= |
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|mile=107.308 |
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|mile2=0.000 |
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|line=y |
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|place=New Mexico–Colorado line}} |
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{{COint |
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|sspan=5 |
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|county=Montezuma |
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|cspan=4 |
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|location=none |
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|mile=6.422 |
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|type=concur |
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|road={{Jct|state=CO|US|160|dir1=west|location1=[[Four Corners]]}} |
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|notes=South end of US 160 overlap}} |
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{{COint |
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|location=Cortez |
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|mile=26.371 |
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|type=concur |
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|road={{Jct|state=CO|US|160|dir1=east|name1=Main Street|city1=Durango}} |
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|notes=North end of US 160 overlap}} |
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{{COint |
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|location=none |
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|mile=36.801 |
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|road={{Jct|state=CO|SH|184|dir1=east|city1=Dolores}} |
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|notes=}} |
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{{COint |
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|location=none |
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|mile=45.131 |
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|road=[[Hovenweep National Monument]], [[Canyons of the Ancients National Monument]] |
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|notes=}} |
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{{COint |
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|county=Dolores |
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|location=Dove Creek |
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|mile=63.272 |
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|road={{Jct|state=CO|SH|141|dir1=north|city1=Egnar|city2=Uravan}} |
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|notes=}} |
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{{jctplace |
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|river_wide=yes |
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|river= |
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|mile=69.602 |
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|mile2=17.020 |
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|line=y |
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|place=Colorado–Utah line}} |
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{{UTint |
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|sspan=1 |
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|county=San Juan |
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|location=Monticello |
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|mile=0.000 |
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|road={{Jct|state=UT|US|191|name1=Main Street|city1=Moab|city2=Blanding}} |
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|notes=Northern terminus; road continues as Center Street; US-191 north is former US-160 west}} |
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{{jctbtm|col=7|keys=concur}} |
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==See also== |
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{{portal||U.S. Roads|Colorado|New Mexico|Utah}} |
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* [[List of U.S. Highways in Colorado]] |
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* [[List of U.S. Highways in New Mexico]] |
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* [[List of U.S. Highways in Utah]] |
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* [[Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia]], fear of the number 666 |
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* [[List of highways numbered 666]] |
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* [[List of highways numbered 491]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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<div style="font-size: 85%"><references/></div> |
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==External links== |
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{{Attached KML|display=title,inline}} |
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{{Commons category|U.S. Route 491}} |
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* [http://www.usends.com/monticello.html Current and historic U.S. highway endpoints at Monticello, Utah, by Dale Sanderson] |
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* [http://www.arizonaroads.com/us/us666.html Arizona Roads by Alan Hamelton] |
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* [http://www.mesalek.com/colo/r400-789.html Colorado Highways by Matt Salek] |
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* [http://www.steve-riner.com/nmhighways/us-interstates.htm U.S. Highways in New Mexico by Steve Riner] |
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{{US 66}} |
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{{Featured article}} |
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[[Category:United States Numbered Highway System|91-4]] |
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{{cleanupus}} |
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[[Category:Three-digit U.S. Highways|91-4]] |
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[[Category:U.S. Highways in Arizona|91-4]] |
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[[Category:U.S. Highways in New Mexico|91-4]] |
[[Category:U.S. Highways in New Mexico|91-4]] |
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[[Category:U.S. Highways in Colorado|91-4]] |
[[Category:U.S. Highways in Colorado|91-4]] |
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[[Category:U.S. Highways in Utah|91-4]] |
[[Category:U.S. Highways in Utah|91-4]] |
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[[Category:U.S. Route 91|4]] |
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[[Category:Gallup, New Mexico]] |
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[[Category:Transportation in McKinley County, New Mexico]] |
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[[Category:Transportation in San Juan County, New Mexico]] |
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[[Category:Transportation in Montezuma County, Colorado]] |
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[[Category:Transportation in Dolores County, Colorado]] |
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[[Category:Transportation in San Juan County, Utah]] |
Latest revision as of 13:41, 12 October 2024
Route information | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Auxiliary route of US 91 | ||||||||||
Maintained by NMDOT, CDOT, UDOT | ||||||||||
Length | 193.930 mi[1] (312.100 km) | |||||||||
History | 1926–2003 as US 666 2003–present as US 491[2] | |||||||||
Tourist routes | Trails of the Ancients Byway | |||||||||
Major junctions | ||||||||||
South end | I-40 / NM 602 in Gallup, NM | |||||||||
| ||||||||||
North end | US 191 in Monticello, UT | |||||||||
Location | ||||||||||
Country | United States | |||||||||
States | New Mexico, Colorado, Utah | |||||||||
Counties | NM: McKinley, San Juan CO: Montezuma, Dolores UT: San Juan | |||||||||
Highway system | ||||||||||
|
U.S. Route 491 (US 491) is a north–south U.S. Highway serving the Four Corners region of the United States. It was created in 2003 as a renumbering of U.S. Route 666 (US 666). With the US 666 designation, the road was nicknamed the "Devil's Highway" because of the significance of the number 666 to many Christian denominations as the Number of the Beast.[2] This Satanic connotation, combined with a high fatality rate along the New Mexico portion, convinced some people the highway was cursed. The problem was compounded by persistent sign theft. These factors led to two efforts to renumber the highway, first by officials in Arizona, then by those in New Mexico. There have been safety improvement projects since the renumbering, and fatality rates have subsequently decreased.[3]
The highway, now a spur route of US 91 via its connection to US 191, runs through New Mexico, Colorado and Utah, as well as the tribal nations of the Navajo Nation and Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. The highway passes by two mountains considered sacred by Native Americans: Ute Mountain and an extinct volcanic core named Shiprock. Other features along the route include Mesa Verde National Park and Dove Creek, Colorado, the self-proclaimed pinto-bean capital of the world.
Route description
[edit]US 491 serves the states of New Mexico, Colorado and Utah. Before 1992, US 666 also served Arizona. The Arizona portion was renumbered separately and is now part of US 191.[4] The former US 666 was the only highway to have passed through each of the Four Corners states, even though it never came near the Four Corners Monument, which is accessed via US 160.[5] At several points along US 491, mountain ranges in all of the Four Corners states are visible from a single location. The alignment of the highway is mostly north–south, however the Utah portion was signed east–west.[6]
New Mexico
[edit]US 491 begins at Gallup, at a junction with Interstate 40 (I-40), and currently runs north along Muñoz Drive.[7] The routing has changed to bypass the downtown area. The original route used 9th Street, starting at US 66.[8] US 491 leaves Gallup and passes north through the eastern half of the Navajo Nation.[9] Along the way, the road passes through the small tribal communities and trading posts of Tohatchi, Buffalo Springs, Naschitti, Sheep Springs and Newcomb.[10] The Navajo tribal capital at Window Rock, Arizona, is just west of the highway corridor, accessed by State Road 264 (NM 264). The largest city served by US 491 is Shiprock, which takes its name from one of several extinct volcano cores in the area. Shiprock is known as "the winged rock" in the Navajo language, and the mountain is considered sacred by the Navajo people.[11] Shiprock is where the US 491 crosses the San Juan River and is briefly concurrent with US 64. After passing Shiprock, the route continues north to the Colorado state line. The New Mexico portion has been designated the "John Pinto Highway" by the New Mexico state legislature.[10]
It is on the Trails of the Ancients Byway, one of the designated New Mexico Scenic Byways.[12]
Colorado
[edit]The New Mexico-Colorado state line is where the highway passes from the Navajo Nation to Ute Mountain Ute tribal lands. The highway passes to the east of the tribe's namesake, Ute Mountain, believed to belong to a great warrior god of the Ute People.[13] US 491 proceeds diagonally to the northwest in the extreme southwestern corner of the state.[14] The highway exits tribal lands near Cortez and Mesa Verde National Park. After leaving Cortez, the road gradually rises in elevation while proceeding towards Utah. Here, the route features large pinto bean farming regions including Dove Creek, which bills itself as the "pinto bean capital of the world".[15] Canyons of the Ancients National Monument is located along the ascent, just west of the highway. Along this ascent is an access road for Hovenweep National Monument at the state line. A portion of the road in Colorado has been designated the Trail of the Ancients, a National Scenic Byway, which uses US 491 as an access for these parks and monuments in southwest Colorado.[16]
Utah
[edit]Once in Utah, US 491 gradually ascends to the Abajo Mountains. Still visible are large farming regions. Upon reaching an elevation of 7,000 feet (2,100 m), the highway arrives at a weigh station and reaches the town of Monticello. US 491 enters the town on Central Street and terminates near the city park at an intersection with US 191, which runs along Main Street.[17] All highways in Utah are codified into law; US 491 is defined at Utah Code Annotated §72-4-137(11).[6]
History
[edit]Pre-1926
[edit]Before the Mexican–American War, when this area was ceded to the United States, the main trade route through this part of Mexico was the Old Spanish Trail. This trail extended from Santa Fe, New Mexico to Los Angeles. The trail had multiple routes; however, the main route proceeded north towards Moab, Utah, one of the few places where the Colorado River can be crossed without having to traverse steep cliffs. The modern US 491 roughly correlates with the main route of the Old Spanish Trail between Cortez, Colorado and its northern terminus.[18]
Before 1926, all of modern US 491 existed as state routes. In New Mexico, US 666 absorbed a portion of State Road 32 (NM 32) from Gallup to Shiprock, and completely replaced NM 121 from Shiprock to the Colorado state line.[19] The portion in Colorado was numbered State Highway 106 (SH 106) from the New Mexico state line to Cortez, and SH 10 from Cortez to Utah.[20][21] At the time, SH 10 traversed the southern portion of Colorado. While most of this corridor today has a U.S. Highway designation, a portion of SH 10 still exists.[22] In Utah, the route was originally numbered State Route 9 (SR 9), which also included what is now US 191 from Monticello to Crescent Junction. Utah has since re-used the SR 9 designation for a different road.[23]
U.S. Route 666
[edit]Location | Gallup, NM – Monticello, UT |
---|---|
Existed | 1926–2003 |
The route was upgraded to a U.S. Highway in 1926, as U.S. Route 666. This number was appropriate and in accordance with the road numbering guidelines for U.S. Highways, being the sixth spur along the highway's parent highway, the famed cross-continental highway U.S. Route 66, from which US 491 breaks around Gallup, New Mexico. This number was assigned by the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO), a coordinating body that created the U.S. Highway System.[2] At that time, the northern terminus of the route was in Cortez, at an intersection with then US 450 (modern US 160).[24]
Over time the route became known as the "Devil's Highway", a reference to the Number of the Beast.[25] This nickname and association made some visitors uncomfortable,[26] as well as making the signs targets for theft.[27] Because of the highway's number, accidents and other phenomena, this became repeated as legend. These legends convinced some people the highway was cursed.[28] One unnamed highway patrol officer was quoted in USA Today as stating a drunk-driving suspect told him, "Triple 6 is evil. Everyone dies on that highway."[2] Skeptics point out that the highway has a lower than average fatality rate in Utah and Colorado;[29] only the New Mexico portion is statistically a dangerous highway.[28] Skeptics further state the high fatality rate in New Mexico can be explained by an inadequate design for the traffic loads at the time.[30] During the renumbering debate, the Albuquerque Journal opined that the planned highway improvements would do more to reduce fatalities than the renumbering itself.[28]
The curse of US 666 is briefly discussed in Jonathan D. Rosenblum's book, Copper Crucible, which investigates the Arizona Copper Mine Strike of 1983. This strike occurred along the highway near Morenci, Arizona.[31] The highway was used as a plot element in films and television, including Route 666, Natural Born Killers,[2] and Repo Man, as well as a two-part episode of the series Married... with Children, titled "Route 666".[32] These pieces are not accurate in portraying the route; for example, one depicts the route in Nevada.[32]
Extensions into Arizona and Utah
[edit]On December 4, 1938, the southern terminus of the route was extended from Gallup across the Arizona state line to US 80 in Douglas, near the Mexican border.[33] It ran concurrent with US 66 for 30 miles (48.3 km) before the turn south.[2] Prior to the extension, the route between Douglas and Sanders was designated as SR 81.[34] The Arizona portion of the highway is known as the Coronado Trail Scenic Byway, as it approximated the path of the Spanish explorer, Francisco Vásquez de Coronado.[35] This portion is noted for mountainous terrain, with hairpin turns and steep grades, that reaches an altitude of over 9,000 feet (2,700 m). The curves force a speed limit of 10 miles per hour (16 km/h) in spots.[2]
In 1970, several U.S. Highways in the Four Corners region were re-aligned. As part of this change, US 160 was rerouted west of Cortez to serve the Four Corners Monument and enter Arizona instead of Utah.[36] US 666 was extended up part of the old route of US 160 to Monticello, Utah, at an intersection with then US 163 (now US 191).[37]
In 1985, the Utah Department of Transportation petitioned to extend US 666 northwest to Richfield, but the proposal was rejected. The proposed extension followed SR 95, SR 24, and SR 119. A concurrency with US 191 would have been routed through Blanding and Monticello to connect to the rest of the route. One of the reasons cited for rejecting the proposal was that portions of SR 24 were not built to standards desired for additions to the U.S. Highway System.[38]
Elimination and renumbering of US 666
[edit]In 1985, the US 66 designation was eliminated, leaving US 666 (and other routes) as "orphans". This fact would be used as a supporting factor in later petitions to renumber the highway. In 1992, the part in Arizona was renumbered as an extension of US 191. This truncated US 666 again at Gallup, New Mexico, now at I-40.[4]
The route in the other three states became U.S. Route 491 in 2003, mainly through efforts of New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson. He requested the change due to the "infamy brought by the inopportune naming of the road".[2] While campaigning for governor, Richardson promised to renumber the highway as part of a larger plan to improve the highway and build relations between New Mexico and the Navajo Nation.[25] Although traditional Navajo culture does not share the belief of 666 being an evil number, some Navajos had attempted for years to change the number as a way to raise awareness about the dangerous highway.[28] The highway had largely been ignored, with few improvements made since it was first paved.[25] By 1997, US 666 was named one of the 20 most dangerous highways in the United States.[28] Some Navajo leaders were concerned that efforts to reduce poverty on Navajo lands, via promoting tourism and outside investment, were being hampered by the Christian aversion to the number.[2]
In New Mexico's motion to renumber the highway, they selected U.S. Route 393. Since the route came nowhere near US 93, AASHTO instead suggested US 491, noting it as a branch of US 191 at Monticello, Utah. Although the next three-digit child of US 91 would have been U.S. Route 291, both the 291 and 391 designations were already in use as state route numbers in at least one of the affected states.[2] At the news that the motion had passed, a New Mexico spokesperson stated, "The devil's out of here, and we say goodbye and good riddance."[28] Referring to the motion passing with a different number from what New Mexico requested, another spokesperson responded, "As long as it's not 666 and it's nothing satanic, that's OK."[2] US 666 officially ceased to exist on May 31, 2003, although temporary "New 491 – Old 666" signs were posted after the change to aid travelers using old maps.[28]
Although sign theft had always been a problem along this highway, thefts reached epidemic proportions when the pending number change was announced. Within days of the announcement, virtually every US 666 sign had been stolen, some for sale on eBay.[39] Officials in Utah reported that five entire sign assemblies had been cut down with a chainsaw and stolen, while New Mexico officials reported that even signs welded to metal posts, as a theft deterrent, had been stolen. Officials speculated from one scene that someone had intentionally crashed a car into the sign post to break the welds.[27]
The dedication of the "new" highway was postponed until July 30, 2003, to coincide with the start of construction projects to improve safety on the highway.[25] At the dedication George Blue Horse, a Navajo medicine man, performed a ceremony to remove the curse from the highway. In the Navajo language he stated, "The road itself never ends. It goes on generation to generation. The new number is a good one. The new road will be a medicine."[28]
Newspapers and television stations interviewed people along the route about their opinions on the changing of the highway's number. Even some people who believed in the 666 curse disagreed with the change. One went on record as stating highway officials, "are messing with the wrong guy. They're making the devil mad. They should have left the 666 alone." Others were more sarcastic. One Monticello resident stated, "We'll really miss all the potheads stopping and taking pictures of the Route 666 sign." Most residents took pride in living along the Devil's Highway and opposed the change. Some commented that no matter the number they would still call the road the Devil's Highway.[25]
Post-renumbering
[edit]Since the renumbering in 2003, portions of US 491 in New Mexico have been upgraded to a four-lane divided highway, with grade separations at the busiest interchanges. The New Mexico Department of Transportation has noted that, as sections are upgraded, fatality rates improve on the four-lane portions, but remain high on the two-lane portions. As construction has proceeded, the most dangerous portions of the highway have moved to points where the four-lane portion ends, and traffic merges to two lanes. This has caused the department to coordinate the phases of the upgrades to minimize the number of two-lane/four-lane transitions.[3] Construction on the final phase was originally scheduled to begin January 2008,[10] however the state applied for American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds to finish the project and completion was delayed until 2012.[40]
Major intersections
[edit]Note: The Utah mileposts are posted in a west-to-east direction, while Colorado's and New Mexico's mileposts are posted in a south-to-north direction. All exits are unnumbered.
State | County | Location | mi[7][41][42] | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Mexico | McKinley | Gallup | 0.000 | 0.000 | NM 602 south – Zuni Pueblo I-40 – Albuquerque, Flagstaff | Southern terminus; I-40 exit 20; road continues beyond I-40 as NM 602 |
Yah-ta-hey | 7.002 | 11.269 | NM 264 west | Interchange; left exit northbound, left entrances | ||
San Juan | Sheep Springs | 47.250 | 76.042 | NM 134 west – Crystal | ||
Shiprock | 91.186 | 146.750 | US 64 west – Teec Nos Pos | South end of US 64 overlap; former NM 504 | ||
92.038 | 148.121 | US 64 east – Farmington | North end of US 64 overlap | |||
107.308 0.000 | 172.695 0.000 | New Mexico–Colorado line | ||||
Colorado | Montezuma | | 6.422 | 10.335 | US 160 west – Four Corners | South end of US 160 overlap |
Cortez | 26.371 | 42.440 | US 160 east (Main Street) – Durango | North end of US 160 overlap | ||
| 36.801 | 59.225 | SH 184 east – Dolores | |||
| 45.131 | 72.631 | Hovenweep National Monument, Canyons of the Ancients National Monument | |||
Dolores | Dove Creek | 63.272 | 101.826 | SH 141 north – Egnar, Uravan | ||
69.602 17.020 | 112.014 27.391 | Colorado–Utah line | ||||
Utah | San Juan | Monticello | 0.000 | 0.000 | US 191 (Main Street) – Moab, Blanding | Northern terminus; road continues as Center Street; US-191 north is former US-160 west |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
See also
[edit]- List of U.S. Highways in Colorado
- List of U.S. Highways in New Mexico
- List of U.S. Highways in Utah
- Hexakosioihexekontahexaphobia, fear of the number 666
- List of highways numbered 666
- List of highways numbered 491
References
[edit]- ^ This figure is derived from summing the three state mileage logs used in the Major intersections section
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Weingroff, Richard F. (June 18, 2003). "US 666: Beast of a Highway?". Highway History. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
- ^ a b Staff (2006). "Environmental Assessment US 491 South Corridor phase B MP 15 to MP 46" (PDF). New Mexico Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2008.
- ^ a b Staff (January 2005). "The Devil's Gone On US 491" (PDF). Qué Pasa. New Mexico Department of Transportation: 1. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 25, 2009. Retrieved May 15, 2008.
- ^ Western States (Map) (1979 ed.). 1 in = 40 mi. American Automobile Association. 1979.
- ^ a b "Utah Code Annotated". State of Utah. Archived from the original on July 11, 2008. Retrieved May 15, 2008.
- ^ a b New Mexico Department of Transportation Mile Post Map (PDF) (Map). New Mexico Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 23, 2011. Retrieved March 1, 2008.
- ^ United States Geological Survey (1954). Gallup, New Mexico; Arizona (Topographic map). 1:250,000. Reston, Virginia: United States Geological Survey.
- ^ a b c Staff. "US 666 Corridor Highway". New Mexico Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on January 7, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2008.
- ^ "Beyond Borders". American Cowboy. Active Interest Media: 44. November 2002. ISSN 1079-3690.
- ^ Staff. "Trail of the Ancients". New Mexico Tourism Department. Archived from the original on August 21, 2014. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
- ^ Staff (1999). "Ute Mountain Ute telling of the Legend of the Sleeping Ute". Legends and Children's Stories of the Ute Tribe. Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. Retrieved November 26, 2008.
- ^ Staff. "Ute Mountain Casino". Ute Mountain Ute Tribe. Archived from the original on October 25, 2007. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
- ^ Staff. "Dove Creek". Colorado Historical Society. Archived from the original on October 28, 2010. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
- ^ Staff. "Trail of the Ancients". America's Byways. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved November 21, 2007.
- ^ Utah Road and Recreation Atlas (Map). 1:250000. Benchmark Maps. 2002. p. 79. § F8. ISBN 0-929591-74-7.
- ^ von Till Warren, Elizabeth. "Old Spanish Trail History". Old Spanish Trail Association. Archived from the original on March 8, 2008. Retrieved March 19, 2008.
- ^ Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally. 1926. p. 69. Retrieved June 26, 2008.
- ^ Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally. 1926. p. 70. Retrieved June 26, 2008.
- ^ Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally. 1927. p. 68. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
- ^ Colorado Atlas and Gazateer (Map). Yarmouth, Maine: DeLorme. 2002. p. 52-53. ISBN 0899332889.
- ^ "State Road Resolutions SR-9.pdf". Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
- ^ Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
- ^ a b c d e Smart, Christopher (July 30, 2003). "Sixes nixed on 'devil's road'". Salt Lake Tribune. p. A1. Retrieved March 27, 2023 – via J. Willard Marriott Library.
- ^ MGZ (December 2003). "Its Number Was Up". National Geographic Magazine.
- ^ a b "Renaming US 666 Prompts a Run on 'Satanic' Souvenirs". The New York Times. Associated Press. July 20, 2003. p. 20. Archived from the original on March 27, 2008. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Linthicum, Leslie (July 31, 2003). "It's Now US 491, Not US 666". Albuquerque Journal.
- ^ Wilgoren, Jodi (June 13, 2003). "Journeys; The End of the Road For 'Devil's Highway'". The New York Times. Retrieved April 12, 2007.
- ^ Landry, Alysa (June 21, 2015). "'Devil's Highway': Navajos Grapple With One of Most Dangerous Roads in US". Indian Country Today. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
- ^ Rosenblum, Jonathan D. (1998). Copper Crucible (2nd ed.). Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8554-1.
- ^ a b "Married... with Children: Complete Season 5 DVD". Sony Electronics Inc. Archived from the original on June 16, 2011. Retrieved June 14, 2008.
- ^ Executive Committee (May 28, 1938). "Addendum to Minutes of Executive Committee" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 53. Retrieved June 15, 2023 – via Wikimedia Commons.
U.S. 666 was extended from Gallup, New Mexico via Lupton (Arizona), Sanders, St. Johns, Clifton, Safford, Bowie Junction; thence over State Route 81 to Douglas. (Minutes of Executive Committee, December 4, 1938, Dallas, Texas)
- ^ Arizona State Highway Department and United States Public Roads Administration (June 1939). "History of the Arizona State Highway Department" (PDF). Retrieved May 18, 2023 – via Arizona Memory Project.
- ^ Staff. "Coronado Trail Scenic Byway". America's Byways. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved November 17, 2007.
- ^ Rookhuyzen, David (January 20, 2020). "Highway History: From Navajo Route 1 to US 160". Arizona Department of Transportation. Retrieved January 25, 2023.
- ^ "State Road Resolutions SR-163.pdf". Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
- ^ "State Road Resolutions SR-666.pdf". Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
- ^ Marten, Susan Taylor (July 20, 2003). "US 666 is gone, but signs went first". St. Petersburg Times. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
- ^ Staff (September 14, 2009). "American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Tiger Discretionary Grant Application for US 491 Roadway Widening" (PDF). Navajo Nation Department of Transportation; New Mexico Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 16, 2011. Retrieved June 29, 2011.
- ^ Staff. "Highways Data". Colorado Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on May 26, 2012. Retrieved March 1, 2008.
- ^ "Highway Reference Online - US-491". maps.udot.utah.gov. Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 1, 2008.
External links
[edit]- Current and historic U.S. highway endpoints at Monticello, Utah, by Dale Sanderson
- Arizona Roads by Alan Hamelton
- Colorado Highways by Matt Salek
- U.S. Highways in New Mexico by Steve Riner
- United States Numbered Highway System
- U.S. Highways in New Mexico
- U.S. Highways in Colorado
- U.S. Highways in Utah
- U.S. Route 91
- Gallup, New Mexico
- Transportation in McKinley County, New Mexico
- Transportation in San Juan County, New Mexico
- Transportation in Montezuma County, Colorado
- Transportation in Dolores County, Colorado
- Transportation in San Juan County, Utah