Florida State Road 267: Difference between revisions
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FL 267 shield added |
→Major Intersections: I-10 link fixed |
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*Northern terminus: Georgia state line (continues as [[State Route 302 (Georgia)|State Route 302]]) |
*Northern terminus: Georgia state line (continues as [[State Route 302 (Georgia)|State Route 302]]) |
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*[[U.S. Route 90|US 90]]/[[State Road 12 (Florida)|SR 12]]/[[State Road 65 (Florida)|SR 65]] |
*[[U.S. Route 90|US 90]]/[[State Road 12 (Florida)|SR 12]]/[[State Road 65 (Florida)|SR 65]] |
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*[[Interstate 10|I-10]] |
*[[Interstate 10 in Florida|I-10]] |
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*[[State Road 20 (Florida)|SR 20]] |
*[[State Road 20 (Florida)|SR 20]] |
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*[[U.S. Route 319|US 319]] |
*[[U.S. Route 319|US 319]] |
Revision as of 03:14, 18 May 2007
State Road 267, although numbered as a north-south route, runs primarily west to east in the eastern Florida panhandle, and can somewhat be considered as a bypass of Tallahassee.
The route begins at the Georgia border, connecting with State Route 302, and runs south through Quincy, intersecting with US 90, before reaching State Road 20.
The route then turns east, briefly joining with FL 20 across the Ochlockonee River, then splitting off and heading southeast through the Apalachicola National Forest, crossing US 319 and State Road 363 before terminating at US 98 in Newport.