List Of Former State Routes In Ohio (50–130)
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List Of Former State Routes In Ohio (50–130)
This is a list of former state routes in Ohio since 1923 with route numbers from 50 through 130 inclusive. __NOTOC__ SR 50 (1923–1926) SR 50 was the route that connected Lebanon to the community of Abe within Newberry Township, Miami County from 1923 to 1926. The route was replaced by SR 48 by 1927. SR 51 (1923–1934) SR 51 was a route in western Ohio that existed between 1923 and 1934. Originally, the route ran from downtown Dayton to SR 54 (currently US 33) in Willshire. In 1932, it was briefly extended north to SR 17 (now US 224) west of Middlebury before being truncated to Greenville the next year having been replaced by SR 49. By 1935, the route was fully absorbed into SR 49. SR 52 (1923–1926) SR 52 was a route in southwestern Ohio from 1923 through 1926. During its first three years in existence, the route ran from Middletown to Springfield. In 1926, the route was extended northeast to SR 55 north of Irwin. The route was replaced in the next year by SR ...
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Lebanon, Ohio
Lebanon is a city in and the county seat of Warren County, Ohio, United States. The population was 20,841 at the 2020 census. It is part of the Cincinnati metropolitan area. History Lebanon is in the Symmes Purchase. The first European settler in what is now Lebanon was Ichabod Corwin, uncle of Ohio Governor Thomas Corwin, who came to Ohio from Bourbon County, Kentucky, and settled on the north branch of Turtle Creek in March 1796. The site of his cabin is now on the grounds of Berry Intermediate School on North Broadway and is marked with a monument erected by the Warren County Historical Society. The town was laid out in September 1802 on land owned by Ichabod Corwin, Silas Hurin, Ephraim Hathaway, and Samuel Manning in Sections 35 and 35 of Town 5, Range 3 North and Sections 5 and 6 of Town 4, Range 3 North of the Between the Miami Rivers Survey. Lebanon was named after the Biblical Lebanon because of the many juniper or Eastern Red cedar trees there, similar to the Lebano ...
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