Oregon Route 19
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the unsigned Highway 19, see Fremont Highway.
| Oregon Route 19 |
|||||||||
| Length: | 120.77 mi (194.36 km) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South end: | |||||||||
| Major junctions: |
|||||||||
| North end: | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
Oregon Route 19 is an Oregon state highway in the north-central part of the state. It runs from Interstate 84 at Arlington in the Columbia River Gorge to a junction with U.S. Route 26 in Grant County, near the Sheep Rock Unit of the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument. Oregon Route 19 is the northern portion of the John Day Highway No. 5 (see Oregon highways and routes) and follows the John Day River from Service Creek to its southern terminus. The route has two brief overlaps Oregon Route 206 and Oregon Route 207, both on the portions of those routes included in the Wasco-Heppner Highway No. 300.
[edit] Cities and towns along the route
[edit] Major intersections
- Note: mileposts do not reflect actual mileage due to realignments.
| County | Location | Mile[1] | Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grant | 124.17 | |||
| Kimberly | 105.23 | |||
| Wheeler | 95.56 | South end of OR 207 overlap | ||
| Service Creek | 78.56 | North end of OR 207 overlap | ||
| Fossil | 58.15 | |||
| Gilliam | Condon | 38.27 | South end of OR 206 overlap | |
| 38.07 | North end of OR 206 overlap | |||
| Arlington | 0.00 | Interchange |
[edit] References
- ^ Oregon Department of Transportation, Public Road Inventory (primarily the Digital Video Log), accessed April 2008

