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The Indiana Lincoln Highway Byway Alternate Valparaiso: Fort Wayne: October 4, 2011 Follows the Indiana portion of the 1928 route of the Lincoln Highway [4]
I-80/I-90 (Indiana Toll Road) near Middlebury: US 131 near Middlebury 1961: current US 136: 74.930: 120.588 US 136 near Foster: I-74/I-465 in Speedway: 1952: current US 150: 177.17: 285.13 US 150 near West Terre Haute: I-64/US 150 at New Albany: 1926: current US 152: 168: 270 US 36/US 40/US 52 in Indianapolis: US 41 in St. John
Interstate Highways are owned and maintained by the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) unless it is a toll road. The system was authorized by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, which provided federal funds for construction of limited access highways. Indiana's initial set of seven Interstate Highways were announced in September 1957 ...
Lincoln Highway had two different routes through Indiana, the original route went through South Bend and Elkhart. [1] The Lincoln Highway's northern alignment is now called Lincoln Way and is a byway .
The highway includes four-lane rural sections, an urbanized four-lane divided expressway, and several high-traffic six-lane freeway areas. First designated as a U.S. Highway in 1926, US 30 replaced the original State Road 2 (SR 2) and SR 44 designation of the highway which dated back to the formation of the Indiana State Road system.
For example, road "200 E" would be a north–south road located 2 miles (3.2 km) east of the meridian line, and road "350 N" would be an east–west road located 3.5 miles (5.6 km) north of the division line. Roads along a county line may be given a grid designation or may be referred to as County Line Road.
0–9. Indiana State Road 1; Indiana State Road 2; Indiana State Road 3; Indiana State Road 4; Indiana State Road 5; Indiana State Road 7; Indiana State Road 8
State Roads in the U.S. state of Indiana are numbered rationally: in general, odd one-digit and two-digit highways are north–south highways, numbers increasing toward the west; even one-digit and two-digit highways are east-west highways, numbers increasing toward the south, the opposite of the Interstate Highway System.