Ohio State Route 199: Difference between revisions
Niceguyedc (talk | contribs) m v1.36 - disambiguate Ohio State Route 200 per WP:INTDABLINK |
added Category:U.S. Route 23 using HotCat |
||
Line 175: | Line 175: | ||
[[Category:Transportation in Wyandot County, Ohio]] |
[[Category:Transportation in Wyandot County, Ohio]] |
||
[[Category:Transportation in Seneca County, Ohio]] |
[[Category:Transportation in Seneca County, Ohio]] |
||
[[Category:U.S. Route 23]] |
|||
{{Ohio-road-stub}} |
{{Ohio-road-stub}} |
Revision as of 02:58, 20 November 2016
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2013) |
Route information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintained by ODOT | ||||
Length | 62.160 mi[1] (100.037 km) | |||
Existed | 1924–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | US 23 near Upper Sandusky | |||
US 23 / US 30 near Upper Sandusky | ||||
North end | US 20 / SR 795 in Perrysburg | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Ohio | |||
Counties | Wyandot, Seneca, Wood | |||
Highway system | ||||
| ||||
|
Ohio State Route 199 (SR 199) is a north-south highway in northwest Ohio. Its southern terminus is at an interchange with US 23 just south of Upper Sandusky, and its northern terminus is at US 20 and SR 795 in Perrysburg.
The route begins northerly into Upper Sandusky, and then on to Carey, where it joins US 23. The two routes run concurrently from Carey to Fostoria. From there, SR 199 continues to West Millgrove and to US 6, whose route it joins for a mile (1.6 km) as it crosses the Portage River. The route then continues north to Perrysburg.
History
Most of SR 199 was formerly the route of US 23. Before 1966, SR 199 was truncated at the south in Fostoria, followed most of the current route of US 23, and was truncated at the north just east of Toledo, Ohio. In 1966, SR 199 was extended along its current route to Upper Sandusky along US 23's current route from Fostoria to Carey and its old route from Carey to Upper Sandusky. In 1969, it switched routes with US 23 from Fostoria to Perrysburg.
Major intersections
County | Location | mi[1] | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wyandot | Pitt Township | 0.000 | 0.000 | US 23 / CR 61 – Marion, Carey | Interchange |
Upper Sandusky | 4.342 | 6.988 | SR 53 east / SR 67 north (Sandusky Avenue) | Southern end of SR 53 / SR 67 concurrency | |
4.506 | 7.252 | SR 53 west / SR 67 south (8th Street) | Northern end of SR 53 / SR 67 concurrency | ||
7.053– 7.160 | 11.351– 11.523 | US 23 / US 30 to I-75 – Marion | Interchange | ||
Carey | 14.218 | 22.882 | SR 103 east – Sycamore | Southern end of SR 103 concurrency | |
15.401 | 24.786 | US 23 south / SR 103 west (Vance Street) / SR 568 west (Findlay Street) | Northern end of SR 103 concurrency; southern end of US 23 concurrency; eastern terminus of SR 568 | ||
Seneca | Loudon Township | 24.781 | 39.881 | US 224 – Findlay, Tiffin | |
Fostoria | 29.579– 29.588 | 47.603– 47.617 | SR 18 east (East Lytle Street) | Southern end of SR 18 concurrency | |
30.093 | 48.430 | SR 12 west (West Lytle Street) | Southern end of SR 12 concurrency | ||
30.394– 30.465 | 48.914– 49.029 | SR 12 east (East South Street) | Northern end of SR 12 concurrency | ||
Seneca–Hancock county line | 30.918 | 49.758 | SR 18 west / SR 613 west (West North Street) | Northern end of SR 18 concurrency; eastern terminus of SR 613 | |
Seneca–Wood county line | 31.840 | 51.242 | US 23 north (North County Line Street) | Northern end of US 23 concurrency | |
Wood | Montgomery Township | 40.953 | 65.907 | SR 281 (Defiance Pike) – Defiance, Wayne, Bradner | |
Freedom Township | 46.313 | 74.534 | US 6 east – Fremont | Southern end of US 6 concurrency | |
47.284 | 76.096 | US 6 west – Bowling Green | Northern end of US 6 concurrency | ||
Webster Township | 50.188 | 80.770 | SR 105 – Bowling Green, Pemberville | ||
54.420 | 87.581 | SR 582 – Haskins, Luckey, Woodville | |||
Perrysburg | 62.160 | 100.037 | US 20 (Louisiana Avenue) / SR 795 east (Indiana Avenue) | Western terminus of SR 795 | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
References
- ^ a b "DESTAPE". Ohio Department of Transportation. July 3, 2014. Retrieved September 1, 2014.