This is a list of former state routes in Ohio since 1923 with route numbers from 569 through 673 inclusive. For a full list of former state highways in Ohio, see the list of state routes in Ohio.
SR 570 was a state-maintained section of Neowash Road in southern Lucas County. The four-mile-long (6.4 km) route connected SR 295 in Providence Township and US 24 southwest of Waterville. The route existed from 1937 until 1961.[4][5] Today, Neowash Road is signed as Lucas County Road 143.[6]
SR 571 was a former state route in Bridgewater Township, Williams County connecting US 20 and the Michigan state line. The four-mile-long (6.4 km) route existed from 1937 until 1955.[2][4] The road itself is still a state highway as SR 576 was signed on the entire route after being extended from Montpelier.[7]
SR 572 was a state route in Lucas County. When it was created in 1937, the route extended from SR 570 near Bailey and ended at US 20 near Silica.[4] By 1939, the route was slightly extended at both ends: It was extended on the southern end through Bailey to end at US 24 and was extended to SR 568 at its northern end.[8] The route would follow this route until it was deleted in 1945.[9]
SR 573 was the designation for Mekus Road in northeastern Defiance County from 1939 until 1945.[8][9] Throughout its history, the entire four-mile-long (6.4 km) route was gravel-paved.[8][9] The route connected SR 66 with SR 580 north of Defiance. Today, all of Mekus Road is a part of Defiance County Road 81.[10]
SR 577 was the designation for a state route in the Toledo area. The route was first created in 1939, started in downtown Toledo, and traveled northeast along the banks of the Maumee River on Summit Street before turning north at the edge of the Maumee Bay. The route ended at the Michigan state line in Washington Township.[8][11] In 1942, the route was extended south to Maumee along Summit Street, Broadway and River Road, roads that followed the course of the Maumee River, but not directly next to the river (US 24 followed the road next to the river).[12] By 1946, the section of SR 577 north of downtown Toledo was deleted from the state highway system but was extended further south to SR 64 in Waterville.[13] The route last appeared on official Ohio highway maps in 1951.[14]
SR 578 was a short 0.19-mile-long (310 m) state highway connecting SR 65 in Grand Rapids to US 24 in Providence Township via a bridge over the Maumee River.[15][16] When the route was created in 1937, SR 578 started at SR 33 (now SR 108) south of Napoleon and traveled east through Malinta before turning north to end at US 24 in Grand Rapids.[4] At the time, US 24 crossed to the north side of the Maumee River at the Grand Rapids bridge. By 1942, SR 578 was extended across the river when US 24 was routed on the north side of the river for its entire length.[12] However, by 1945, the entire route only consisted of the bridge and its approaches, the alignment it would use for nearly the next seven decades.[9][17] In 2012, as a part of the construction of the US 24 freeway in the area, SR 295 was extended from its old southern terminus along the former US 24 to Grand Rapids, taking over all of SR 578.[18] The SR 578 designation was deleted as a result.
SR 581 was a 15-mile-long (24 km) state highway in the eastern portion of Lucas County. The route began at the intersection of Summit Street (SR 577) and Ash Street in Toledo and immediately crossed the Maumee River on the Ash-Consaul Bridge.[20] After crossing the bridge, the route headed east along Consaul Street which turned into Corduroy Road upon leaving Toledo city limits (now a part of the city of Oregon).[21] Near the communities of Reno Beach and Lakeland, SR 581 made a right turn onto Howard Road to end at SR 2 near Bono.[22] The route existed from 1937 until 1939.[4][8]
SR 584 was a short state route in southern Ottawa County. Starting at SR 19 in Salem Township, south of Oak Harbor and the Portage River, the route traveled east along West Oak Harbor-Southeast Road for about eight miles (13 km) before ending at SR 53 in Bay Township at the Sandusky Bay. The route existed from 1937 until 1957.[4][7] The former route is now a part of Ottawa County Road 14.[23]
SR 585 was the designation for the road that currently carries US 20 from the community of Kipton to east of Oberlin.[4][17] SR 585 started at the intersection of US 20 and what was then the northern terminus of SR 511; it traveled west-northwest until it intersected US 20 again while it was concurrent with SR 10. Created in 1937, it existed for about two years until it was fully replaced by US 20; SR 10 was then extended over the former routing of US 20 through Kipton and Oberlin.[4][8][24]
SR 591 was a state highway in southwestern Seneca County. The route existed from 1937 until 1955 and traveled from Springville at US 23, passed through New Riegel, and ended west of Tiffin at US 224.[2][4] Today, all of the former route retains its old number as Seneca County Road 591.[25]
SR 592 was a state route in western Seneca County near Fostoria. The route started at SR 12 and SR 113 in Jackson Township and traveled due east for about ten miles (16 km) where it ended at SR 53 in Jackson Township. SR 592 served the community of Cromers.[4] The route existed from 1937 until 1955.[2][4] All of the former route and portions of the east-west road west of SR 12 / SR 113 is known as Seneca County Road 592.[25]
SR 596 was a state route that ran around the northeastern shore of Buckeye Lake entirely in Licking County. The route it used throughout its history from 1937 until 1958 was from SR 152 southeast of Hebron to SR 13 near Edgewater Beach.[4][26] When the route was deleted in 1958, around the time part of the route was cut off by the construction of Interstate 70, the jurisdiction of the route was transferred to the county and is today known as Licking County Road 596.[27]
SR 607 was a state route in the Proctorville area from 1986 until 2007.[29][30] The route's southern terminus had always been at the West Virginia state line on the East Huntington Bridge. SR 607 crossed over SR 7 and then looped 180 degrees to end at a T-intersection with SR 7. Around 2005, a road was built stretching north from the northern end of the bridge was built. This new road, which ended 0.55 miles (0.89 km) away from a newly created intersection with SR 607 at Irene Road was designated SR 607-T.[31] In 2007, both sections of SR 607 were deleted and was replaced by an extension of SR 775 except for the ramp from the north-south road to SR 7, the ramp became a part of SR 7 when it was routed on a bypass of Proctorville.[30]
SR 612 was the designation for a state-maintained section of West 130th Street in Cuyahoga County. The route started at SR 82 (Royalton Road) on the border of Strongsville and North Royalton and traveled due north. SR 612 traveled along the borders of Strongsville, North Royalton, Middleburg Heights, Parma, Parma Heights, and Brook Park. SR 612 reached SR 17 (Brookpark Road) at the city limits of Cleveland. This intersection served as the northern terminus of SR 612 from 1937 until 1939.[4][8] After 1940, SR 612 continued north into Cleveland for about three miles (4.8 km) to SR 10 (Lorain Avenue).[24] The route was deleted from the state highway system between 1951 and 1953.[14][32]
SR 613 was a state route in southeastern Cuyahoga County. The route carried Richmond Road from Broadway Road (at the time also SR 14) to Aurora Road (SR 43) in Glenwillow and Solon. SR 613 existed from 1937 until 1945 when it was replaced by SR 175 though today, the road is not state-maintained at all.[4][9][13][17]
SR 622 was a state route entirely in Poland Township that existed from 1937 until 1941.[4][11] The route started at SR 18 (modern-day SR 289) near the city limits of Struthers and traveled east along New Castle Road (currently Mahoning County Road 106[33]) before ending at the Pennsylvania state line, though the road continues in Pennsylvania as Skyhill Road.[11][34]
SR 623 was a state route on the Stark–Mahoning County county line in existence from 1938 until 1941.[1][11] The route also formed the border between the city of Alliance and Smith Township. The short route, also called Mahoning Avenue, connected US 62 (East State Street) with East Patterson Street, which was signed as SR 173 while SR 623 existed.[11]
SR 627 was a north-south state route in Stark County. The southern terminus of SR 627 was located in the community of Deerfield (within Deerfield Township) at SR 14, just north of its intersection with US 224. The route traveled due north through several small communities in eastern Portage County. From 1937 until 1941, SR 627 traveled north through the village of Windham before ending at SR 82 in the community of Mahoning.[4][11] After 1942, due to the opening of the Ravenna Arsenal, the section of SR 627 north of SR 5 in Paris was removed from the state highway system.[12] The route would remain in existence until after 1969 when it was replaced in its entirety by SR 225.[35][36]
SR 628 was a short east-west state route connecting SR 8 and SR 43 on East Maple Street in North Canton. From 1937 until 1941, SR 628 extended east from SR 43 along Easton Road (current Stark County Road 86[37]) to end at US 62.[4][11] For the remainder of the route's history until 1967, the route consisted of the SR 8-SR 43 segment.[12][38] By 1969, SR 628 was turned over to local control, the same time SR 8 between Canton and Akron was deleted from the state highway system.[35]
SR 629 was an east-west state highway in central Mahoning County. The route started at SR 45 in Jackson Township and traveled east along Kirk Road. After intersecting SR 46, Kirk Road ended at the Austintown Township–Youngstown border, but SR 629 continued south on Tippecanoe Road to end at US 62. The route existed from 1937 until 1941.[4][11]
SR 631 was a state route in the vicinity of Northfield that existed from 1937 until 1967.[4][38] When it was created in 1937, the route ran on Valley View Road from the Cuyahoga/Summit County line on the northern border of Sagamore Hills and traveled southeast through Northfield and Macedonia before ending at SR 91 just north of Hudson.[4] There was a slight realignment at the eastern terminus when the Ohio Turnpike was completed in 1955; the eastern terminus was moved slightly north to avoid crossing over the Turnpike.[26] This would be the route's alignment until about a year before its deletion; SR 631 was truncated to Northfield Center at SR 8 in 1967.[38] Shortly after this, the entire route was deleted from the state highway system.[35]
SR 632 was the state-numbered route for Fishcreek Road in Stow. Throughout its history from 1937 until 1966, SR 632 always started at Kent Road (SR 5, now a part of SR 59) and traveled northwest to SR 91 (Darrow Road).[4][39] The road is now municipally-maintained.[40]
SR 655 was a seven-mile-long (11 km) state highway entirely in Mead Township, Belmont County. The L-shaped route started at SR 147 in the community of Key and traveled south then east to the community of Diles Bottom on the banks of the Ohio River at SR 7. The route existed from 1939 until 1967 and was replaced by Belmont County Road 54.[8][38][42]
SR 667 was a short-lived state highway from SR 13 east of Somerset to Crooksville at SR 75 (now SR 93). The route only existed in 1937 having been created on a local road from SR 13 to Saltillo and then taking over a portion of SR 345 to Crooksville.[4][43] In the next year, the entire route was replaced by SR 669, the number the road continues to carry today.[1][17]
SR 670 was a state route connecting SR 147 near the Senecaville Lake to SR 265 in Salesville. When the route was created in 1937, the route was much straighter than the roads the route would follow later.[4][11] In 1942, SR 670 was slightly rerouted at its southern end at a point closer to Batesville along SR 147; the route also closely followed the northern shoreline of the lake to Kennonsburg.[12] This alignment would be SR 670's route until 1973.[44] In that year, I-670 was designated in Columbus and due to ODOT not repeating route numbers throughout the state, the route south of SR 313's eastern terminus became an extension of SR 313 and the remainder of the route became SR 761.[45]
^ abcdOfficial 1938 Ohio Highway Map(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by John Jaster, Jr., Director. Ohio Department of Highways. 1938. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
^ abcdOhio Highway Map 1955(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by S.O. Linzell, Director. ODOH. 1955. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Point Place Quadrangle - Ohio/Mich (Map). 1 : 24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1938. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
^Reno Beach Quadrangle - Ohio (Map). 1 : 24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1938. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
^Ottawa County(PDF) (Map). ODOT. June 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
^ abcOhio Highway Map 1940(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Robt. S. Beightler, Director. ODOH. 1940. Retrieved August 18, 2013.
^ abSeneca County(PDF) (Map). ODOT. June 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
^ ab1958-1959 Official Ohio Highway Map(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Charles M. Noble, Director of Highways. ODOH. 1958. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Licking County(PDF) (Map). ODOT. June 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2014.