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State Route 321 (SR 321) is a short 9.07-mile (14.60 km) long state highway in southwestern Highland County, Ohio. The route connects SR 134 in Buford and US 62 with the village of Mowrystown . Route description
Enters Ohio via a bridge to Cincinnati from Kentucky; it is Kentucky maintained, however. In Ohio, US 25 was replaced by US 127, US 24, SR 25 , CR 25A, and I-75. US 27
U.S. Highway 321; Arkansas Highway 321. Arkansas Highway 321 Spur; Georgia State Route 321 (former) Kentucky Route 321; Louisiana Highway 321; Mississippi Highway 321; Nevada State Route 321; New Mexico State Road 321; New York: New York State Route 321; County Route 321 (Erie County, New York) North Carolina Highway 321 (former) Ohio State ...
Loar Highway in Amboy Township: 1923: current SR 65: 115.84: 186.43 SR 47 in Salem Township: I-280 in Toledo: 1923: current SR 66: 118.60: 190.87 US 36 in Piqua: US 20 in Fayette: 1923: current SR 67: 84.78: 136.44 US 33 in Wapakoneta: SR 18/SR 19 in Republic: 1923: current SR 68 — — Union City: Waldo 1923: 1932 SR 69
In 1935 the Ohio General Assembly passed a law which added 5,000 miles of roads to the state highway system over a 12-month period. [7] [8] These roads were assigned route numbers in the 500s, 600s, and 700s. [9] In 1962 certain numbers were retired to accommodate numbers in the Interstate Highway System. [citation needed]
U.S. Route 321 Business (US 321 Bus) was established in June 1999, as a renumbering all of NC 155 and part of mainline US 321 in Catawba County. Traversing 37.2 miles (59.9 km) through Gaston , Lincoln and Catawba counties, it connects the cities and towns of Dallas, High Shoals , Lincolnton , Maiden , Newton , Conover and Hickory.
State Route 32 (SR 32), also known as the James A. Rhodes Appalachian Highway, [3] is a major east–west highway across the southern portion of the U.S. state of Ohio. It is the eighth longest state route in Ohio, spanning southern Ohio from Cincinnati to Belpre , across the Ohio River from Parkersburg, West Virginia .
The highway types covered by this convention have two naming formats – official name and article title – which can be the same. The official name is the naming format typically used by the state department of transportation (DOT) or the general public, and is what should be used to refer the highway in article prose.