State Road 75, the highest two-digit route in the U.S. state of Indiana consists of two discontinuous north–south segments.

State Road 75 marker

State Road 75

Map
SR 75 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by INDOT
Length59.563 mi[1] (95.857 km)
Southern segment
Length36.896 mi[1] (59.378 km)
South end US 40 in Stilesville
Major intersections
North end SR 47 in Thorntown
Northern segment
Length22.667 mi[1] (36.479 km)
South end US 421 / SR 38 / SR 39 near Frankfort
Major intersections
North end SR 218 in Camden
Location
CountryUnited States
StateIndiana
CountiesBoone, Hendricks, Putnam, Carroll, Clinton
Highway system
  • Indiana State Highway System
I-74 I-80

Route description edit

Southern section edit

The southern section is about 37 miles (60 km) long. It begins at U.S. Route 40 at the Putnam-Hendricks county line and runs northward through the towns of Coatesville and North Salem in Hendricks County, and Jamestown and Advance in Boone County. There is a junction with U.S. Route 136 at Jamestown, and a junction with Interstate 74 just to the north. The northern terminus is at State Road 47 in the town of Thorntown.

Northern section edit

The northern section is 22.7 miles (36.5 km) long. It begins at U.S. Route 421 / State Road 38 / State Road 39 in Frankfort in Clinton County and runs northward, crossing State Road 26 east of Rossville, and passing through the town of Flora where it crosses State Road 18. The northern terminus is at State Road 218 in the town of Camden in Carroll County.

In August 2008, the Indiana Department of Transportation awarded Carroll County a grant of $1.2 million to be used to extend the road 3 miles (4.8 km) north, to connect with the planned relocation of State Road 25.[citation needed]

Former route in Spencer County edit

When the Glover H. Cary Bridge between Owensboro, Kentucky and Rockport, Indiana opened in September 1940, its northern end connected to a new nine-mile (14 km) stretch of state highway through Spencer County that fed traffic to State Road 66. As the Kentucky highway which connected to the bridge was designated Kentucky 75, Indiana gave its connector road the same number.

In 1954, U.S. Route 231 was extended through Indiana, and the southernmost stretch of the new U.S. route in Indiana was routed along S.R. 75. The road was signed with both designations. The Indiana Department of Highways removed 75's designation from U.S. 231 in Spencer County by 1979, along with 231's other concurrent routes throughout the state (others included S.R. 45 and S.R. 43).

In October 2002, with the opening of the William H. Natcher Bridge and the relocation of U.S. 231, this segment of highway was again redesignated, this time as a southern extension of S.R. 161.

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
PutnamJefferson Township0.0000.000  US 40 – Brazil, IndianapolisSouthern terminus of SR 75
0.1770.285  SR 240 – Greencastle
HendricksMarion Township9.47815.253  US 36 – Rockville, Danville
North Salem17.05727.451  SR 236 – Danville
HendricksBoone
county line
Jamestown21.78735.063 
 
SR 234 west – Ladoga
Western end of SR 234 concurrency
Boone22.23335.781   US 136 / SR 234 – Brownsburg, CrawfordsvilleEastern end of SR 234 concurrency and terminus of SR 234
23.558–
23.687
37.913–
38.121
  I-74 – Indianapolis, DanvilleExit number 52 on I-74
Jefferson Township31.36550.477  SR 32 – Crawfordsville, Lebanon
Thorntown36.89659.378  SR 47 – CrawfordsvilleNorthern terminus of the southern section of SR 75
Gap in route
ClintonFrankfort36.89759.380    US 421 / SR 38 / SR 39 – Delphi, IndianapolisSouthern terminus of the northern section of SR 75
Owen Township46.14974.270  SR 26 – Lafayette, Kokomo
CarrollFlora55.18388.808  SR 18 – Delphi, Marion
Camden59.56395.857  SR 218Northern terminus of SR 75
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Indiana Department of Transportation (July 2016). Reference Post Book (PDF). Indianapolis: Indiana Department of Transportation. Retrieved February 3, 2017.

External links edit

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