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State Route 60 (SR 60) is a north–south state highway that runs the entire length of the U.S. state of Ohio, from the Williamstown Bridge over the Ohio River in Marietta to U.S. Route 6 (US 6) near Lake Erie in Vermilion. It is the seventh longest state route in Ohio. Heading south from Vermilion, SR 60 traverses rural North Central Ohio ...
Agricultural scene on Sperry Road Location of Vermilion Township (red) in Erie County, adjacent to the city of Vermilion Coordinates: 41°24′26″N 82°23′13″W / 41.40722°N 82.38694°W / 41.40722; -82
Vermilion is a city in Erie and Lorain Counties in the U.S. state of Ohio, on Lake Erie. Its population was 10,659 at the 2020 census . [ 5 ] Located about 35 miles west of Cleveland and 17 miles east of Sandusky , it is part of the Cleveland metropolitan area and Sandusky micropolitan area .
This is more than three times the influx to any other state. In total, 28.4% of the state is 60 and older. St. Petersburg was the city that saw the most retirees moving in at a net of 1,662 ...
It sits near the Columbia River and Oregon-Washington border and sports a beautiful downtown with lots of art, good food, and culture. Expect average rents a bit higher than other places in the state.
60.70 Morenci Road in Chesterfield Township: SR 65 in Toledo: 1940: current SR 121: 35.94: 57.84 SR 121 at Indiana state line in Jefferson Township: SR 47/SR 185 in Versailles: 1923: current SR 122: 43.26: 69.62 Old SR 122 at Indiana state line on Dixon–Jackson township line: SR 48 in Clearcreek Township: 1923: current SR 123: 43.61: 70.18
Wakeman is a village in Huron County, Ohio, United States, along the Vermilion River.Its namesake was Jesup Wakeman, [3] an early settler of Fairfield County, Connecticut, who was involved in western land speculation between 1800 and 1840.
A marina on the Vermilion River at the city of Vermilion. The Vermilion River is a river in northern Ohio in the United States. It is 66.9 miles (107.7 km) long [1] and is a tributary of Lake Erie, draining an area of 268 square miles (690 km 2). [2] The name alludes to the reddish clay that is the predominant local soil along its route. [3]