U.S. Route 95 in Idaho

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U.S. Route 95 marker

U.S. Route 95
North and South Highway[1]
Route information
Maintained by ITD
Length: 538.562 mi[3] (866.732 km)
Existed: 1926[2] – present
Tourist
routes:
Part of the
International Selkirk Loop
Major junctions
South end: US 95 at the Oregon state line
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North end: BC 95 in Eastport, ID
into British Columbia, Canada
Highway system

State Highways in Idaho

US-93 SH-97

In the U.S. state of Idaho, U.S. Route 95 is a north–south highway near the western border of the state, stretching from Oregon to British Columbia for over 538 miles (866 km). It was earlier known in the state as the North and South Highway.[1][4][5][6]

Route description

US 95 continues into Idaho from southeastern Oregon as an undivided two-lane highway for the majority of its length. As it is the state's primary north–south highway, Idaho is in the process of widening US 95 to an Interstate-style divided four-lane highway, from the Oregon state line in the southwest to Eastport at the northern border with Canada (Kingsgate, BC).

Oregon border to New Meadows

US 95 departs Malheur County, Oregon, and enters Idaho in the high desert of Owyhee County,[7] about 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Boise. It progresses north-northeast to just west of Marsing, where it meets with the southern terminus of State Highway 55. US 95 then turns briefly west, then north to Homedale, and crosses the Snake River before a junction with concurrent US 20 and US 26 as it passes through Parma. US 95 runs north concurrent with US 20 and US 26 for eight miles (13 km).

As it proceeds north near Idaho's western border, US 95 crosses Interstate 84 (exit 3) and US 30 before proceeding north through Payette and Weiser. It continues on to Midvale, Cambridge, and Council, then climbs into the Payette National Forest, passing the Tamarack sawmill site, and turns east to New Meadows. Here, US 95 joins with Highway 55, the two-lane undivided route that connects to Boise through McCall, Cascade and Horseshoe Bend. The elevation at the junction in New Meadows is 3,865 feet (1,178 m) above sea level.

Meadows Valley to Lewiston

US 95 continues north through Meadows Valley north of the junction (roadcam), then descends 2,000 feet (610 m) with the Little Salmon River to Riggins, tree-sparse but surrounded by mile-high mountains (vertical drop). Immediately after Riggins, the highway crosses the main Salmon River and enters the Pacific Time Zone. US 95 northbound gradually descends with the widening river until White Bird, where it climbs 2,700 feet (820 m) in 7 miles (11 km) to the cut at the top of White Bird Hill, peaking at an elevation of 4,245 feet (1,294 m) (roadcam) with an average gradient of over 7%. The steeper, straighter, and faster multi-lane grade was opened 49 years ago in June 1975, after ten challenging years of construction.[8] The two-lane road of 1921 to the east was first paved in 1938; it left the Salmon River at White Bird Creek following it up through the town of White Bird, and then gradually climbed the grade in twice the distance, with multiple switchback curves.[9] The arcs, if combined, would form 37 full 360° circles, an average of 950° per mile (590° per km).[10] Following the completion of the new steel bridge over White Bird Creek, the new routing opened in June 1975, ending a decade of construction. The new Lewiston grade to the north was finished in just over two years.[11]

North of the summit, US 95 descends in a steep but relatively short descent (roadcam) to the Camas Prairie and Grangeville at 3,390 feet (1,030 m). The highway then travels northwest towards Cottonwood, whose bypass was finished in 1976,[12] then enters the Nez Perce Indian Reservation.[13] New route construction in the early 1990s bypassed the main streets of Ferdinand and Craigmont.[14][15] The new routing is now above, rather than in, the curvy Lawyers Creek Canyon between the cities, crossing the canyon on an elevated bridge (photo) constructed in 1991.[16][17] Lawyers Canyon is named after Chief Lawyer (c.1801–76) of the Nez Perce, nicknamed for his skill in dealing with the encroaching whites; he is buried in Kamiah.[18] US 95 winds its way westward across the high prairie, near the many timber railroad trestles of the Camas Prairie Railroad, to just east of Winchester. Here, at just under 4,000 feet (1,220 m), the highway turns northward and descends over 3,000 vertical feet (900 m), mostly in the Lapwai Canyon (photos), passing Culdesac, Lapwai, and Spalding at 807 feet (246 m).

Until 1960, US 95 was routed through Winchester and descended Culdesac Hill (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.), considered the worst of the three major grades (White Bird, Lewiston), all of which were extremely twisty.[19] The new route through Lapwai Canyon was built in three years and reduced the distance by over four miles (6 km) and saved 25 minutes of driving time.[20][21] After Spalding, it then proceeds towards the bridge over the Clearwater River to join with US 12 and depart the reservation. The current "Arrow" bridge replaced the "Spalding" bridge 51 years ago in 1973.[22][23][24][25] Ice jams on the river a decade earlier shifted the Spalding bridge.[26]

After crossing the Clearwater, US 95 joins with US 12 for seven miles (11 km) along its north bank, heading westward, adding lanes, and gradually descending toward Lewiston. About midway along the co-sign, the reservation is departed; the highways split several miles later at Lewiston's northeast edge. US 12 briefly turns south to re-cross the river into the city center, and then west to cross the Snake River into Clarkston, Washington.

Lewiston grade to Canada

Lewiston and Clarkston, WA
(old grade in foreground)

US 95 turns northeast, then westward to climb a steep grade, gaining over 1,900 feet (580 m) in 5 miles (8 km), ascending to the southern edge of the rolling Palouse region. The multi-lane grade (averaging over 7%) was opened 47 years ago on October 28, 1977, after 27 months of construction and two decades of planning.[11][27] It replaced the Lewiston Spiral Highway, a narrow and switchback-laden 1917 route to the west with 64 spiral curves and about twice the length; it is visible from a scenic overlook.[28] Similar to the White Bird Hill grade, the descending southbound lanes on the new route have three "runaway truck ramps" to halt any vehicles that experience brake failure.[29]

Just north of the Lewiston grade is a junction with US 195, which proceeds north in Washington to Pullman and Spokane. US 95 continues north in Idaho on the Palouse as a four-lane divided highway (roadcam), completed in October 2007 to Thorn Creek Road (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.), midway between Genesee and Moscow.[30] It then reverts to a two-lane undivided roadway for several miles until Moscow, home of the University of Idaho. Scheduled to be completed first, the divided highway construction between Thorn Creek and Moscow was put on hold, due to new right-of-way and environmental impact concerns.[31][32]

In Moscow, US 95 is diverted a block to either side of Main Street onto multi-lane one-way arterials: northbound on Washington Street, southbound on Jackson Street. The original couplets of 1981[33] used existing streets and were later modified to eliminate sharp right angle turns which were difficult for large trucks to safely manage. The north end couplets were completed in the early 1990s,[34][35][36] the south end in 2000.[37] The construction on the northeast couplet forced the demolition of a noted Moscow watering hole's original west end in January 1991,[38][39] after staving off its elimination for over a decade.[40]

North of Moscow, US 95 resumes as an undivided two-lane highway. As it leaves Latah County, it gradually departs the Palouse and enters the lake country region of the north Panhandle. As it enters Benewah County, US 95 enters the Coeur d'Alene Indian Reservation. US 95 intersects State Highway 5 in Plummer. US 95 becomes a four-lane divided highway as it leaves Worley and has an interchange with State Highway 58. This recently completed section bypasses the tribal casino. US 95 continues north as a divided highway until just south of the Spokane River, where US 95 enters Coeur d'Alene.

US 95 becomes an arterial street and crosses over Interstate 90 Business (Northwest Boulevard) at an interchange. US 95 crosses Interstate 90 at exit 12 and becomes a divided highway north to Hayden, then as an undivided highway past State Highway 54 and Farragut State Park. After crossing Lake Pend Oreille on the 1.1-mile (1.8 km) Sandpoint Long Bridge,[41][42][43] US 95 enters Sandpoint and has a junction with US 2. The two routes run concurrent for 35 miles (56 km), until a few miles after Bonners Ferry, where US 2 heads east into Montana and southeast to Libby, while US 95 continues north for 29 miles (47 km) to the Canadian border at Eastport. At the border, US 95 meets BC 95, which continues northeastward in British Columbia to Cranbrook.

History

US 95 is one of the original routes in the AASHTO's 1926 plan.

Major intersections

County Location mi[3] km Destinations Notes
Owyhee 0.000 0.000 US 95 south – Jordan Valley Continuation into Oregon
26.266 42.271 SH-55 north – Boise, Nampa
Homedale 34.166 54.985 SH-19 west
Canyon Wilder 38.429 61.845 SH-19 east to I-84 – Caldwell
45.509 73.240 US-20 east / US-26 east – Boise Southern end of US 20 / US 26 overlap
53.557 86.192 US-20 west / US-26 west – Nyssa, Ontario Northern end of US 20 / US 26 overlap
Payette 60.815–
60.874
97.872–
97.967
I-84 – Boise, Ontario, Portland Interchange
61.078 98.296 US-30 east – Boise Southern end of US 30 overlap
Fruitland 65.035 104.664 US-30 west to I-84 – Ontario, Portland Northern end of US 30 overlap
Payette 67.242 108.216
Main Street (US-95 Spur north) to SH-52 west
Former alignment of US 95
68.372 110.034 SH-52 – Emmett
Washington Weiser 81.752 131.567
E. Main Street (US-95 Spur)
Cambridge 113.300 182.339 SH-71 north (Hells Canyon Scenic Byway) – Brownlee Dam
Adams New Meadows 160.934 258.998 SH-55 south (Payette River Scenic Byway) – Cascade Dam
Idaho
No major junctions
Adams
No major junctions
Idaho
No major junctions
Adams
No major junctions
Idaho Grangeville 239.782 385.892 SH-13 north – Kooskia
Nez Perce 304.388–
304.535
489.865–
490.102
US-12 east – Orofino, Missoula Interchange; southern end of US 12 overlap
Lewiston 312.219–
312.266
502.468–
502.543
US-12 west – Lewiston, Clarkston, Walla Walla Interchange; northern end of US 12 overlap
318.661–
319.112
512.835–
513.561
US 195 north – Pullman, Colfax, Spokane Northbound exit and southbound entrance only
319.605 514.354
US 195 Spur south – Pullman, Colfax, Spokane
Latah Moscow 344.885 555.039 SH-8 east – Troy Southern end of SH-8 overlap
345.349 555.785 SH-8 west – Pullman Northern end of SH-8 overlap
354.634 570.728 SH-66 west – Palouse
360.554 580.255 SH-6 west – Palouse Southern end of SH-6 overlap
361.724 582.138 SH-6 east – Potlatch Northern end of SH-6 overlap
Benewah 387.502 623.624 SH-60 west – Willard, Tekoa
Plummer 395.877 637.102 SH-5 south to SH-3 – St. Maries
Kootenai 406.764–
407.259
654.623–
655.420
SH-58 west – Rockford Interchange
Coeur d'Alene 429.612–
429.748
691.393–
691.612
I-90 Business Loop – Downtown Coeur d'Alene Interchange, former US-10
430.558–
430.660
692.916–
693.080
I-90 – Spokane, Missoula Interchange
438.880 706.309 SH-53 south – Rathdrum, Spokane
449.099 722.755 SH-54 west – Spirit Lake, Farragut State Park
Bonner Sandpoint 475.029–
475.325
764.485–
764.961
US-2 west / SH-200 east (Pend Oreille Scenic Byway) – Priest River, Cabinet Gorge Dam Interchange; southern end of US 2 overlap
Boundary Bonners Ferry 507.375 816.541 Kootenai Street - City Center
510.370 821.361 US-2 east – Kalispell, Glacier National Park Northern end of US 2 overlap
521.862 839.855 SH-1 north to BC 21 / BC 3 – Porthill, Creston
Eastport 538.562 866.732 Canada–US border
Kingsgate, B.C. BC 95 to BC 3 – Cranbrook Contination into British Columbia
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

Bannered routes

Related routes

References

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  7. Idaho Historical Markers - Owyhee Country
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  10. Idaho Historical Markers - White Bird
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  17. Idaho Transportation Dept. - Bridge deck rehabilitation - 2010-08-06 - accessed 2011-09-25
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External links

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U.S. Route 95
Previous state:
Oregon
Idaho Next state:
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