Ohio State Route 48

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

State Route 48
Length: 83.04 mi[1] (133.64 km)
Formed: 1926
South end: SR 132 near Goshen
Major
junctions:
I-71 in South Lebanon
I-75 in Dayton
I-70 near Englewood
North end: SR 66 near Houston
Counties: Clermont, Warren, Montgomery, Miami, Shelby
Ohio highways
< SR 47 SR 49 >
Interstates - U.S. Routes - State Routes

State Route 48 is a north-south highway in Ohio that runs from SR 132 near Goshen to SR 66 near Houston, passing through Dayton.

In the early 20th century, SR 48 was assigned to completely unrelated routes within the state. From 1923 to 1927, it was the designation given to Barnesville–Hendrysburg, Barnesville–Woodsfield, and Woodsfield–Sistersville Roads in eastern Ohio, now designated SR 800. Present-day SR 48 was previously signed as SR 50, and before that as DaytonCovington and Dayton–Lebanon Roads. (See 1923 Ohio state highway renumbering and 1927 Ohio state highway renumbering).

Contents

[edit] Cities along route

Bolded cities are control cities on highway signage.

[edit] Junctions

County Location Mile Roads intersected Notes
Clermont Goshen 0.00 SR 132
Springvale 0.98–1.38 SR 28
Warren Hopkinsville 6.63 US 22
SR 3
South Lebanon 9.8–9.9 I-71
Lebanon 13.5–13.8 Truck
SR 48T
13.64–14.70 SR 123
14.70 SR 63
14.70–14.92 US 42
Pekin 18.30 SR 122
Kenricksville 23.08 SR 73
Montgomery Centerville 3.26–4.33 SR 725
4.48 I-675
Dayton 11.93 SR 48D Northbound traffic continues on S. Patterson Blvd. and S. Jefferson St.
Southbound traffic joins S. Main St. from S. Ludlow St. via Stout St. (SR 48D)
12.1–12.2 US 35
12.57 SR 4
13.06–13.16 SR 4S
SR 201
SR 202
13.16 SR 48D
13.6–13.7 I-75
Englewood 21.4 I-70
22.13–22.16 US 40
Miami West Milton 3.1 SR 571
Ludlow Falls 5.17–5.64 SR 55
Pleasant Hill 9.24 SR 718
Covington 13.65–14.12 SR 41
14.12 US 36
Clayton 16.89 SR 185
Shelby Houston 5.03 SR 66

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mileages retrieved from Technical Services Straight Line Diagrams unless otherwise noted. Specifically, the diagrams for Routes 4S, 48D, 48R, and 48T were used.

[edit] External links