Route information | ||||
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Maintained by KDOT | ||||
Length | 79.095 mi[3] (127.291 km) | |||
History | Established in 1926;[1] became K-12 c. 1930; re-established as K-51 on January 7, 1937[2] | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | CR M at the Colorado state line at Westola Township | |||
US-56 from Rolla to Hugoton | ||||
East end | US-83 north of Liberal | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Kansas | |||
Counties | Morton, Stevens, Seward | |||
Highway system | ||||
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K-51 is an approximately 79-mile-long (127 km) east–west state highway in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Kansas. K-51 begins at the Colorado state line as a continuation of County Road M and travels eastward through portions of Morton, Stevens, and Seward counties before ending at U.S. Route 83 (US-83) north of Liberal. Along the way, it runs concurrently with US-56 from Rolla to Hugoton. Although K-51 travels through mostly rural farmlands, it does pass through the cities of Richfield, Rolla and Hugoton. The highway is also a two-lane road most of its length with the exception of short sections within Rolla and Hugoton, where it is four lanes.
Before state highways were numbered in Kansas there were auto trails. The eastern terminus (US-83) was part of the Atlantic and Pacific Highway. K-51 was first designated as a state highway in 1926, and at that time started as a continuation of Colorado Highway 51 and went east to K-25 (current K-27). Then by 1927, it ran from K-12 north of Rolla to K-27 in Richfield.[4] Between 1930 and 1931, K-51 was replaced with an extension of K-12. Then on January 1, 1937, K-51 was re-established from the Colorado border east to K-27. Then by 1937, K-51 was extended further east to US-83, its modern-day routing. K-51 originally overlapped US-270, then in a May 18, 1981 resolution, the US-270 designation was removed.
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