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Columbus-area highway marker designating Interstate 71 and Ohio Route 1 (1965). In 1961, SR 1 followed Central Ave. in Cincinnati, to John Street, to Lincoln Park Drive (now Ezzard Charles Drive), to Freeman Avenue, to Western Avenue, to Spring Grove Avenue, to Colerain Avenue to Interstate 75 (at what is now the I-75/I-74 interchange); Interstate 75 from current I-74 interchange to West ...
Length (mi) [1] Length (km) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes US 6: 248.09: 399.26 US 6 in Edgerton: US 6 in Pierpont: 1931: current Also known as the Grand Army of the Republic Highway. [2] US 20: 260.54: 419.30 US 20 near Edon: US 20 near Conneaut: 1926: current US 20N — — — — — — US 20S
SR 1, formerly known as Inter-county Highway 1 until 1921 [1] and State Highway 1 in 1922, [2] was the designation for the National Road and National Old Trails Road through central Ohio between 1912 and 1926. [3] [4] US 40 was first signed along the length of the route in 1926 and became the road's only designation by 1927. [4] [5]
Episode 1: Janice Christensen In 1987, Janice Christensen of Cuyahoga Falls went for a run on the Summit County Bike and Hike Trail, where she was raped and killed by a man who has never been caught.
The William H. Harsha Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge carrying U.S. Route 68 that connects Maysville, Kentucky, and Aberdeen, Ohio, over the Ohio River. It is named for William Harsha, who represented the Ohio portion of the area in the United States House of Representatives. Construction on the bridge started in 1997 and it opened in 2000.
It happened at about 8:30 p.m. near the intersection of Route 1 and Interstate 495 in Plainville. State police said 42-year-old Michael Escolas of Oxford was speeding in a 2021 Jeep Grand Cherokee ...
Construction began in 2001. The main span over the Maumee River is a cable-stayed type bridge with a single pylon and two spans 612'-6" (200 m) on each side of the pylon. The main span approaches are about 4,000 feet (1,200 m) north of the river and 3,350 feet (1,020 m) south of the Maumee. The bridge opened to traffic on June 24, 2007. [1]
Workers in Toledo are mourning a death Wednesday at the Stellantis plant that produces the Jeep Gladiator. The company released a statement Thursday about the death, but details were limited.