Utah_State_Route_195_(pre-1947)

Utah State Route 110

Utah State Route 110

State highway in Utah, United States


State Route 110 (SR-110) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Utah, connecting SR-127 in Syracuse with SR-37 in West Point. The highway is routed entirely on 4500 West.

Quick Facts State Route 110, Route information ...

Route description

SR-110 follows 4500 West in the Weber Valley, near the east shore of the Great Salt Lake and west of the Hooper Canal. The relatively flat route, at about 4,230 feet (1,290 m) above sea level, travels north from SR-127 to SR-37 through the Ogden suburbs of Syracuse and West Point.[2]

History

State Route 195 was created in 1935, running west and north from what was then the end of SR-108 in Syracuse through West Point to the then-end of SR-37 in Hooper.[3] An extension of SR-37 cut back the north end of SR-195 to a point west of Clinton in 1945,[4] and in 1947 the latter route was removed from the state highway system.[5] The portion of SR-195 heading west from SR-108 was restored in 1965 as part of SR-127, and in 1969 a new SR-110 brought the remainder of old SR-195 back onto the system.[6]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Davis County.

More information Location, mi ...

References

KML is not from Wikidata
  1. Utah Department of Transportation, Highway Reference Information: "SR-110". (17.3 KB), updated 2008-05-01, accessed July 2008
  2. Google Maps street maps and USGS topographic maps, accessed July 2008 via ACME Mapper
  3. Utah State Legislature (1935). "Chapter 37: Designation of State Roads". Session Laws of Utah. Route 195. From Hooper on route 37 southerly to Syracuse.
  4. Utah State Legislature (1945). "Chapter 61: State Roads and Routes". Session Laws of Utah. Route 195. From Syracuse on route 108 west two and one-half miles, thence north to route 37.
  5. Utah State Legislature (1947). "Chapter 49". Session Laws of Utah.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Utah_State_Route_195_(pre-1947), and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.