SR 675 was the name for what is now
SR 685. Created in 1937, the route always started at
SR 216 in
Buchtel and ran east for five miles (8.0 km) to
SR 13 in
Trimble Township, south of
Jacksonville.[1] The entire route was located in
Athens County. The route would remain unchanged until 1962 when the route number was changed from 675 to 685 due to the creation of
Interstate 675 in
Dayton.[2]
SR 680 was the former designation for
SR 681 from 1937 until 1962.[1][2] SR 680 was created on a road from
SR 356 near
Mineral to
SR 7 at the
Ohio River in
Reedsville via
Albany and
Darwin. No changes occurred to the routing until 1962 when it was renumbered to SR 681 to avoid the duplication with the newly designated
Interstate 680 near
Youngstown.
SR 686 was a state route in
Stark County connecting
SR 93 in
Lawrence Township to
US 21 in northern
Massillon. The route existed from 1937 until 1941 when it was replaced by Stark County Road 348, also called Orrville Street NW.[1][3][4]
SR 692 was a state route in
Scipio Township connecting
SR 143 between
Walsh and
Harrisonville to SR 680 (later
SR 681) north of
Pageville. The route also intersected
SR 684 at SR 684's northern terminus in Pageville. The route existed from 1937 until December 2013 when most of the route was transferred to
Meigs County jurisdiction.[1] North of SR 684, the road became a part of SR 684.[6]
SR 695 was a short-lived state route serving as the main road through the
Belmont County community of
Lloydsville. Prior to 1939,
US 40 ran through the town, but in 1939 a bypass was built north of the community.[7] SR 695 was designated onto the old main road when US 40 was moved to the bypass.[7] Within one year, SR 695 was replaced by
US 40 Alternate, a designation that would last until the 1960s.[8][9]
SR 699 was a state highway entirely in
Wyandot County in existence from 1937 until 1996.[1][11] From 1937 until 1964, SR 699 started in
Marseilles Township at
SR 37 and ran due north past
SR 294,
SR 53, and the village of
Kirby to end at
US 30N.[1][9] After 1965, SR 699 was shortened to run only between SR 53 and US 30N (later
US 30) serving Kirby.[12] The route was deleted in 1996 when it was replaced by
SR 293 which had formerly been a spur route from US 30 to the village of
Wharton.[11][13]
SR 702 was a short state highway spur from
SR 235 to Turkeyfoot Point on the
Indian Lake shoreline entirely in
Stokes Township,
Logan County.[14] The route was designated in 1940 and remained on this alignment until 1977.[8][15] Today, the former state route is a township-maintained road (T-293).[16]
SR 704 was the designation for what is now
SR 81 between
Willshire and
Lima from 1937 until 1939.[1][7] The route was replaced by SR 81 which formerly ended in
Ada when it was extended through Lima.[8]
SR 723 was a five-mile-long (8.0 km) state highway in
Warren and
Clinton Counties in central Ohio. The route started in
Harveysburg at
SR 73 and ran north to
SR 380 near
New Burlington. The entire route generally followed the Caesar Creek between its two ends. The route existed from 1939 until 1945 when it became a local road.[7][20] Today, part of the road is under water as the Caesar Creek Lake was filled in the 1970s as a part of the creation of
Caesar Creek State Park.
SR 751 was a state highway in and around the eastern side of
Columbus. When it was first designated in 1937, the route was about one-and-a-half-mile-long (2.4 km) and ran from
US 40 to
SR 16, paralleling the
Big Walnut Creek for its entire length.[1] Two years later, SR 751 was extended south to
US 33 southeast of the city bringing the total length to 6.5 miles (10.5 km).[7] Again, the entire route closely followed Big Walnut Creek.[21] The route was deleted after 1959 being replaced by mostly local roads as by the time of its deletion, most of the land through which SR 751 passed through had been incorporated.[22][23][24]
SR 773 was the designation for what is now
SR 162 between
Rochester and
Akron in 1937.[1] After one year signed, the entire route was replaced by SR 162, which during the time of SR 773's existence, had its eastern terminus in
New London.[25] SR 162 was routed over a new road between New London and Rochester to connect to SR 773 and continue to Akron.
SR 780 was a state route in
Highland County. The route began at
SR 134 in the
Salem Township community of
Harwood and ran five miles (8.0 km) northeast and east to
SR 138 in the
Hamer Township community of Danville. SR 780 was designated in 1937 and fully paved by 1941.[1][3] After 1946,
SR 131 was extended from its former end in
Vera Cruz taking over the entire length of SR 780.[26][27]
SR 782 was a state-maintained section of Sandusky Street in
DowntownColumbus. The route started at West Broad Street (which carried
US 40,
US 62, and
SR 3) and traveled north to
US 33 (Dublin Road). When the route was created around 1949, the northern terminus was at an intersection with US 33, but by 1955 the northern terminus was reconstructed to an interchange.[28][29] The route was still in existence in 1957, but later the right-of-way of Sandusky Street was obliterated by the construction of the West Innerbelt (first a section of
Interstate 71, now a part of
SR 315).[30][31]
SR 791 was a state route in and around
Canton along Raff Road between an intersection with Navarre Road (
US 62) and Canton-Massillon Road in
Canton Township to Tuscarawas Street (
US 30) in Canton.[32] The route was created in 1946.[26] Following the completion of the US 30 / US 62 freeway through Canton, the route at SR 791's northern terminus became
SR 172 but the route's southern terminus remained at what used to be the Navarre Road intersection. 1976 was the last year SR 791 appeared on the official Ohio highway map, but the route remained in the Stark County traffic logs through 1988.[15][31][33][34]
SR 793 was a state route located in northwestern
Columbus for one year, 1937.[1] Until 1937, the route that SR 793 would follow was signed as
SR 31.[35] In 1937, SR 31 switched the route it used to enter Columbus; SR 31 headed south to
US 40 while SR 793 was routed from
Marble Cliff to northwestern Columbus at
US 23.[1] Within one year, SR 31 was back on its original alignment, this time co-signed with the newly signed
US 33.[25]
SR 793 was a spur to the Southeastern Ohio Training Center (also called the Boys' Industrial School and the Fairfield School for Boys[37]) in
Hocking Township,
Fairfield County to the city of
Lancaster. The route started at the entrance to the training center and traveled north for 4.8 miles (7.7 km) to an interchange at South Memorial Drive, which carried
US 33 during the time of SR 793's existence. SR 793 was designated in 1959 and had its jurisdiction transferred to Fairfield County and Lancaster City on May 23, 2006.[22][38] The section of the route within the city is now only called South Broad Street while the former route outside of it is called Fairfield County Road 90.[39][40]
SR 794 was the designation for a state-maintained section of Washingtonville Road and short portion of Western Reserve Road in southern
Mahoning County. The route started in
Washingtonville at
SR 14 (which straddled the Mahoning–
Columbiana County line) and traveled north through
Green Township before reaching a
T-intersection with Western Reserve Road on the Green-
Canfield Township. SR 794 then traveled east to end at a nearby intersection with
SR 46 in the community of
Marquis.[41] The route was created in 1937 as a dirt road and was paved within one year.[1][25] SR 794 was decommissioned between 1942 and 1945 and replaced by Mahoning County Road 95 (the north–south portion) and CR 32 (the Western Reserve Road portion).[20][41][42]
SR 796 was the designation for a former segment of
SR 31 through the
Good Hope Township community of
Rockbridge. In 1938, SR 31 was replaced by
US 33 southeast of
Columbus; as a part of this renumbering, a bypass of Rockbridge was built. SR 796 was assigned on the two-mile-long (3.2 km) former two-lane road through the area.[1][25] The route would remain along this alignment until 1964 when it was removed in conjunction with the construction of the US 33 expressway through the county.[9] All of the former route along Rockbridge Road A, Main Street, and Jackson Street is now known as Hocking County Road 10.[46]
SR 797 was a state route in
Portage County connecting
SR 43 in
Franklin Township (just north of
Kent to
SR 82 in the Mantua Center section of
Mantua Township. Throughout its history from 1939 until 1941, the portion of the route between SR 43 and
SR 14 was asphalt-paved, the section between SR 14 and
SR 303 including its
concurrency with it was gravel-paved, between SR 303 and halfway to Mantua Center was a dirt road, and the remainder was gravel.[3][7][8] Today, most of the former route is called Diagonal Road and Portage County Road 155, though the latter is not designated through the portion that is now part of incorporated
Streetsboro.[47]
SR 797 was a route in
Perry Township,
Muskingum County that served the
Zanesville Municipal Airport about six miles (9.7 km) east of the city of
Zanesville. It was initially created in 1946 running from the airport's entrance to an intersection with
US 22 and
US 40.[20][26] In 1965, with the completion of
Interstate 70 in the area, SR 797 was extended north about zero point two miles (0.32 km).[9][12] The total length of the route was 1.19 miles (1.92 km) from the time of the extension until 2003. That year, the portion south of US 22/US 40 was transferred to county jurisdiction with the short remainder of the route between US 22/US 40 and I-70 becoming county-maintained by 2014.[49][50]
SR 798 was a state route in
Belmont County connecting
SR 647 and the northern city limits of
Martins Ferry at
SR 7. The route ran through mostly hilly terrain between its two termini. The route was first signed in 1939 and last appeared on the Ohio state highway map in 1978 but the route did appear in the 1980 Belmont County traffic report.[7][51][52] Today the former SR 798 is a part of Deep Run Road (Belmont County Road 2) and Nixon Run Road (CR 16).[53]
SR 824 was the designation for the 0.57-mile-long (0.92 km) road connecting
SR 338 and the
West Virginia state line near
Ravenswood in
Lebanon Township,
Meigs County.[54] The route included the Ohio portion of the
Ravenswood Bridge over the
Ohio River. The route was signed in 1981 upon the opening of the bridge and was in existence until 2003 when the bridge became a part of the rerouted
US 33 through Meigs County.[55]
^
abcOhio Highway Map 1946(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Perry T. Ford, Director. ODOH. 1946. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Ohio Highway Map 1947(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Murray D. Shaffer, Director. ODOH. 1947. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^
abOhio Highway Map 1949(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by T.J. Kauer, Director. ODOH. 1949. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Ohio Highway Map 1955(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by S.O. Linzell, Director. ODOH. 1955. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Ohio Highway Map 1957(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by George J. Thormyer, Acting Director. ODOH. 1957. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^
abOhio Trailways to Highways 1976(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Richard D. Jackson, Director. ODOT. 1976. Retrieved September 22, 2013.
^Canton west Quadrangle - Ohio (Map). 1 : 24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1958. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
^Canton west Quadrangle - Ohio (Map). 1 : 24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1985 [1967]. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
SR 675 was the name for what is now
SR 685. Created in 1937, the route always started at
SR 216 in
Buchtel and ran east for five miles (8.0 km) to
SR 13 in
Trimble Township, south of
Jacksonville.[1] The entire route was located in
Athens County. The route would remain unchanged until 1962 when the route number was changed from 675 to 685 due to the creation of
Interstate 675 in
Dayton.[2]
SR 680 was the former designation for
SR 681 from 1937 until 1962.[1][2] SR 680 was created on a road from
SR 356 near
Mineral to
SR 7 at the
Ohio River in
Reedsville via
Albany and
Darwin. No changes occurred to the routing until 1962 when it was renumbered to SR 681 to avoid the duplication with the newly designated
Interstate 680 near
Youngstown.
SR 686 was a state route in
Stark County connecting
SR 93 in
Lawrence Township to
US 21 in northern
Massillon. The route existed from 1937 until 1941 when it was replaced by Stark County Road 348, also called Orrville Street NW.[1][3][4]
SR 692 was a state route in
Scipio Township connecting
SR 143 between
Walsh and
Harrisonville to SR 680 (later
SR 681) north of
Pageville. The route also intersected
SR 684 at SR 684's northern terminus in Pageville. The route existed from 1937 until December 2013 when most of the route was transferred to
Meigs County jurisdiction.[1] North of SR 684, the road became a part of SR 684.[6]
SR 695 was a short-lived state route serving as the main road through the
Belmont County community of
Lloydsville. Prior to 1939,
US 40 ran through the town, but in 1939 a bypass was built north of the community.[7] SR 695 was designated onto the old main road when US 40 was moved to the bypass.[7] Within one year, SR 695 was replaced by
US 40 Alternate, a designation that would last until the 1960s.[8][9]
SR 699 was a state highway entirely in
Wyandot County in existence from 1937 until 1996.[1][11] From 1937 until 1964, SR 699 started in
Marseilles Township at
SR 37 and ran due north past
SR 294,
SR 53, and the village of
Kirby to end at
US 30N.[1][9] After 1965, SR 699 was shortened to run only between SR 53 and US 30N (later
US 30) serving Kirby.[12] The route was deleted in 1996 when it was replaced by
SR 293 which had formerly been a spur route from US 30 to the village of
Wharton.[11][13]
SR 702 was a short state highway spur from
SR 235 to Turkeyfoot Point on the
Indian Lake shoreline entirely in
Stokes Township,
Logan County.[14] The route was designated in 1940 and remained on this alignment until 1977.[8][15] Today, the former state route is a township-maintained road (T-293).[16]
SR 704 was the designation for what is now
SR 81 between
Willshire and
Lima from 1937 until 1939.[1][7] The route was replaced by SR 81 which formerly ended in
Ada when it was extended through Lima.[8]
SR 723 was a five-mile-long (8.0 km) state highway in
Warren and
Clinton Counties in central Ohio. The route started in
Harveysburg at
SR 73 and ran north to
SR 380 near
New Burlington. The entire route generally followed the Caesar Creek between its two ends. The route existed from 1939 until 1945 when it became a local road.[7][20] Today, part of the road is under water as the Caesar Creek Lake was filled in the 1970s as a part of the creation of
Caesar Creek State Park.
SR 751 was a state highway in and around the eastern side of
Columbus. When it was first designated in 1937, the route was about one-and-a-half-mile-long (2.4 km) and ran from
US 40 to
SR 16, paralleling the
Big Walnut Creek for its entire length.[1] Two years later, SR 751 was extended south to
US 33 southeast of the city bringing the total length to 6.5 miles (10.5 km).[7] Again, the entire route closely followed Big Walnut Creek.[21] The route was deleted after 1959 being replaced by mostly local roads as by the time of its deletion, most of the land through which SR 751 passed through had been incorporated.[22][23][24]
SR 773 was the designation for what is now
SR 162 between
Rochester and
Akron in 1937.[1] After one year signed, the entire route was replaced by SR 162, which during the time of SR 773's existence, had its eastern terminus in
New London.[25] SR 162 was routed over a new road between New London and Rochester to connect to SR 773 and continue to Akron.
SR 780 was a state route in
Highland County. The route began at
SR 134 in the
Salem Township community of
Harwood and ran five miles (8.0 km) northeast and east to
SR 138 in the
Hamer Township community of Danville. SR 780 was designated in 1937 and fully paved by 1941.[1][3] After 1946,
SR 131 was extended from its former end in
Vera Cruz taking over the entire length of SR 780.[26][27]
SR 782 was a state-maintained section of Sandusky Street in
DowntownColumbus. The route started at West Broad Street (which carried
US 40,
US 62, and
SR 3) and traveled north to
US 33 (Dublin Road). When the route was created around 1949, the northern terminus was at an intersection with US 33, but by 1955 the northern terminus was reconstructed to an interchange.[28][29] The route was still in existence in 1957, but later the right-of-way of Sandusky Street was obliterated by the construction of the West Innerbelt (first a section of
Interstate 71, now a part of
SR 315).[30][31]
SR 791 was a state route in and around
Canton along Raff Road between an intersection with Navarre Road (
US 62) and Canton-Massillon Road in
Canton Township to Tuscarawas Street (
US 30) in Canton.[32] The route was created in 1946.[26] Following the completion of the US 30 / US 62 freeway through Canton, the route at SR 791's northern terminus became
SR 172 but the route's southern terminus remained at what used to be the Navarre Road intersection. 1976 was the last year SR 791 appeared on the official Ohio highway map, but the route remained in the Stark County traffic logs through 1988.[15][31][33][34]
SR 793 was a state route located in northwestern
Columbus for one year, 1937.[1] Until 1937, the route that SR 793 would follow was signed as
SR 31.[35] In 1937, SR 31 switched the route it used to enter Columbus; SR 31 headed south to
US 40 while SR 793 was routed from
Marble Cliff to northwestern Columbus at
US 23.[1] Within one year, SR 31 was back on its original alignment, this time co-signed with the newly signed
US 33.[25]
SR 793 was a spur to the Southeastern Ohio Training Center (also called the Boys' Industrial School and the Fairfield School for Boys[37]) in
Hocking Township,
Fairfield County to the city of
Lancaster. The route started at the entrance to the training center and traveled north for 4.8 miles (7.7 km) to an interchange at South Memorial Drive, which carried
US 33 during the time of SR 793's existence. SR 793 was designated in 1959 and had its jurisdiction transferred to Fairfield County and Lancaster City on May 23, 2006.[22][38] The section of the route within the city is now only called South Broad Street while the former route outside of it is called Fairfield County Road 90.[39][40]
SR 794 was the designation for a state-maintained section of Washingtonville Road and short portion of Western Reserve Road in southern
Mahoning County. The route started in
Washingtonville at
SR 14 (which straddled the Mahoning–
Columbiana County line) and traveled north through
Green Township before reaching a
T-intersection with Western Reserve Road on the Green-
Canfield Township. SR 794 then traveled east to end at a nearby intersection with
SR 46 in the community of
Marquis.[41] The route was created in 1937 as a dirt road and was paved within one year.[1][25] SR 794 was decommissioned between 1942 and 1945 and replaced by Mahoning County Road 95 (the north–south portion) and CR 32 (the Western Reserve Road portion).[20][41][42]
SR 796 was the designation for a former segment of
SR 31 through the
Good Hope Township community of
Rockbridge. In 1938, SR 31 was replaced by
US 33 southeast of
Columbus; as a part of this renumbering, a bypass of Rockbridge was built. SR 796 was assigned on the two-mile-long (3.2 km) former two-lane road through the area.[1][25] The route would remain along this alignment until 1964 when it was removed in conjunction with the construction of the US 33 expressway through the county.[9] All of the former route along Rockbridge Road A, Main Street, and Jackson Street is now known as Hocking County Road 10.[46]
SR 797 was a state route in
Portage County connecting
SR 43 in
Franklin Township (just north of
Kent to
SR 82 in the Mantua Center section of
Mantua Township. Throughout its history from 1939 until 1941, the portion of the route between SR 43 and
SR 14 was asphalt-paved, the section between SR 14 and
SR 303 including its
concurrency with it was gravel-paved, between SR 303 and halfway to Mantua Center was a dirt road, and the remainder was gravel.[3][7][8] Today, most of the former route is called Diagonal Road and Portage County Road 155, though the latter is not designated through the portion that is now part of incorporated
Streetsboro.[47]
SR 797 was a route in
Perry Township,
Muskingum County that served the
Zanesville Municipal Airport about six miles (9.7 km) east of the city of
Zanesville. It was initially created in 1946 running from the airport's entrance to an intersection with
US 22 and
US 40.[20][26] In 1965, with the completion of
Interstate 70 in the area, SR 797 was extended north about zero point two miles (0.32 km).[9][12] The total length of the route was 1.19 miles (1.92 km) from the time of the extension until 2003. That year, the portion south of US 22/US 40 was transferred to county jurisdiction with the short remainder of the route between US 22/US 40 and I-70 becoming county-maintained by 2014.[49][50]
SR 798 was a state route in
Belmont County connecting
SR 647 and the northern city limits of
Martins Ferry at
SR 7. The route ran through mostly hilly terrain between its two termini. The route was first signed in 1939 and last appeared on the Ohio state highway map in 1978 but the route did appear in the 1980 Belmont County traffic report.[7][51][52] Today the former SR 798 is a part of Deep Run Road (Belmont County Road 2) and Nixon Run Road (CR 16).[53]
SR 824 was the designation for the 0.57-mile-long (0.92 km) road connecting
SR 338 and the
West Virginia state line near
Ravenswood in
Lebanon Township,
Meigs County.[54] The route included the Ohio portion of the
Ravenswood Bridge over the
Ohio River. The route was signed in 1981 upon the opening of the bridge and was in existence until 2003 when the bridge became a part of the rerouted
US 33 through Meigs County.[55]
^
abcOhio Highway Map 1946(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Perry T. Ford, Director. ODOH. 1946. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Ohio Highway Map 1947(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Murray D. Shaffer, Director. ODOH. 1947. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^
abOhio Highway Map 1949(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by T.J. Kauer, Director. ODOH. 1949. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Ohio Highway Map 1955(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by S.O. Linzell, Director. ODOH. 1955. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^Ohio Highway Map 1957(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by George J. Thormyer, Acting Director. ODOH. 1957. Retrieved September 23, 2013.
^
abOhio Trailways to Highways 1976(MrSID) (Map). Cartography by Richard D. Jackson, Director. ODOT. 1976. Retrieved September 22, 2013.
^Canton west Quadrangle - Ohio (Map). 1 : 24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1958. Retrieved April 6, 2014.
^Canton west Quadrangle - Ohio (Map). 1 : 24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). United States Geological Survey. 1985 [1967]. Retrieved April 6, 2014.