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List of former state routes in Georgia (1–199)

This is a list of former state routes in the U.S. state of Georgia. This list represents routes that traveled through the state but are no longer in operation, have been decommissioned, or have been renumbered.

Standard state highway markers
StateGeorgia State Route XX (SR XX)
System links
  • Georgia State Highway System

State Route 1E edit

 

State Route 1E

LocationFloyd CountyRome
Existed1955[1][2]–1985[3][4]

State Route 1E (SR 1E) was a route in Floyd County extending along present-day Old Cedartown Road, Park Avenue, Maple Avenue, East Sixth Street, and 2nd Avenue from US 27/SR 1 to US 27/SR 1, as well as US 411/SR 53. Originally part of US 27/SR 1, it was originally designated as SR 1 before being reassigned as SR 1E in 1955.[1][2] US 27/SR 1 had been relocated along former SR 1 Spur, which is present-day US 27/SR 1 from Old Cedartown Road to present-day US 411 in 1938 with the old route remaining as SR 1 through Lindale. When US 27 was upgraded and relocated in 1968 to the Rome Connector, SR 1E was truncated to end at the present-day interchange of Maple Avenue. Essentially a business route for an unincorporated community south of Rome, the state no longer saw the value in retaining an old alignment and transferred control to Floyd County in 1985.[3][4]

State Route 3W (Albany 1946–1957) edit

 

State Route 3W

LocationAlbany
Existed1946[5][6]–1960[2][7]

State Route 3W (SR 3W) was a state highway in the city of Albany. It traversed portions of Dougherty and Lee counties. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path as it currently does in the Albany metropolitan area.[8] By the end of 1926, the segment of the highway from the Mitchell–Dougherty county line to Albany had a "completed hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, US 19 was designated on this stretch of SR 3.[10][11]

By the end of 1946, SR 3W was projected to be designated from the western part of Albany to US 19/SR 3 north of the city.[5][6] By the middle of 1950, the entire length of SR 3W was hard surfaced.[12][13] By July 1957, SR 3 in the northern part of Albany was redesignated as SR 3 Conn. due to SR 3W being redesignated as part of SR 3.[2][7]

State Route 3W (Albany 1960–1973) edit

 

State Route 3W

LocationAlbany
Existed1960[7][14]–1973[15][16]

State Route 3W (SR 3W) was a state highway that existed in the city of Albany. It traversed portions of Dougherty and Lee counties. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, the segment from the Mitchell–Dougherty county line to Albany had a "completed hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, US 19 was designated on it through the Albany metropolitan area.[10][11]

By the end of 1946, SR 3W was projected to be designated from the western part of Albany to US 19/SR 3 north of the city.[5][6] By April 1949, the southern part of SR 3W was hard surfaced, while its northern part had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[17][12] By the middle of 1950, the entire length of SR 3W was hard surfaced.[12][13] By July 1957, SR 3 in the northern part of Albany was redesignated as SR 3 Conn. due to SR 3W being redesignated as part of SR 3.[2][7] By June 1960, SR 3 Conn. was redesignated as part of the SR 3 mainline, and its old path was redesignated as the second SR 3W in the city.[7][14] In 1973, SR 3W was redesignated as part of SR 3, while its former path was redesignated as part of SR 133.[15][16]

State Route 3W (Thomaston) edit

 

State Route 3W

LocationThomaston
Existed1963[14][18]–1987[19][20]

State Route 3W (SR 3W) was a state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston, in Upson County. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a "completed hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, US 19 was designated on this segment.[10][11] By June 1963, the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E. It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on.[14][18] In 1987, SR 3W was redesignated as SR 3S.[19][20]

State Route 3E (Thomaston) edit

 

State Route 3E

LocationThomaston
Existed1963[14][18]–1987[19][20]

State Route 3E (SR 3E) was a state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston, in Upson County. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a "completed hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, US 19 was designated on this segment.[10][11] By June 1963, the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E. It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on.[14][18] In 1987, SR 3E was redesignated as SR 3N.[19][20]

State Route 3N edit

 

State Route 3N

LocationThomaston
Existed1987[19][20]–1988[20][21]

State Route 3N (SR 3N) was a short-lived state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston, in Upson County. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a "completed hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, US 19 was designated on this segment.[10][11] By June 1963, the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E. It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on.[14][18] In 1987, SR 3E was redesignated as SR 3N.[19][20] In 1988, SR 3N in Thomaston was redesignated as the northbound lanes of SR 3.[20][21]

State Route 3S (Thomaston) edit

 

State Route 3S

LocationThomaston
Existed1987[19][20]–1988[20][21]

State Route 3S (SR 3S) was a short-lived state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston, in Upson County. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a "completed hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, US 19 was designated on this segment.[10][11] By June 1963, the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E. It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on.[14][18] In 1987, SR 3W was redesignated as SR 3S.[19][20] In 1988, SR 3S in Thomaston was redesignated as the southbound lanes of SR 3.[20][21]

State Route 3W (Atlanta–Marietta 1937–1946) edit

 

State Route 3W

LocationAtlantaMarietta
Existed1937[22][23]–1946[5][6]

State Route 3W (SR 3W) was a state highway that existed in Atlanta and Marietta. It traversed portions of Fulton and Cobb counties. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through this area as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, US 41 had been designated on this segment of the highway. The Atlanta–Marietta segment had a "completed hard surface".[9][10]

Late in 1937, SR 3 was split into two parts between Atlanta and the northwest part of Marietta. US 41/SR 3 traveled northwest on the original path, while SR 3E traveled north-northwest on a more eastern path between the two cities.[24][22] By the end of the year, SR 3W was established, traveling northwest with US 41 on Marietta Street and Old Marietta Road.[22][23] By the end of 1946, SR 3W was redesignated as part of the SR 3 mainline.[5][6]

State Route 3W (Atlanta–Marietta 1954–1955) edit

 

State Route 3W

LocationAtlantaMarietta
Existed1954[25][1]–1955[1][2]

State Route 3W (SR 3W) was a short-lived state highway that existed in Atlanta and Marietta. It traversed portions of Fulton and Cobb counties. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through these cities as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, US 41 had been designated on this segment of SR 3. It had a "completed hard surface".[9][10]

Late in 1937, SR 3 was split into two parts between Atlanta and the northwest part of Marietta. US 41/SR 3 traveled northwest on the original path, while SR 3E traveled north-northwest on a more eastern path between the two cities.[24][22] By the end of the year, SR 3W was established, traveling northwest with US 41 on Marietta Street and Old Marietta Road, while SR 3E traveled north-northwest on Hemphill Street and Northside Drive.[22][23] By the end of 1946, SR 3W was redesignated as part of the SR 3 mainline.[5][6] By June 1954, the second SR 3W in this area was designated between the two cities.[25][1] By June 1955, it was redesignated as part of SR 3.[1][2]

State Route 3E (Atlanta–Marietta) edit

 

State Route 3E

LocationAtlantaMarietta
Existed1937[24][22]–1985[26][4]

State Route 3E (SR 3E) was a state highway that existed in Atlanta and Marietta. It traversed portions of Fulton and Cobb counties. At least as early as 1919, SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through these two cities as it currently does.[8] By the end of 1926, US 41 had been designated on this entire segment of SR 3, which had a "completed hard surface".[9][10]

Late in 1937, SR 3 was split into two parts between Atlanta and the northwest part of Marietta. US 41/SR 3 traveled northwest on the original path, while SR 3E traveled north-northwest on a more eastern path between the two cities. SR 3E's path from SR 120 in the east part of Marietta to US 41/SR 3 in the northwestern part of the city. The rest of SR 3E was under construction.[24][22] By the end of the year, SR 3W was established, traveling northwest with US 41 on Marietta Street and Old Marietta Road, while SR 3E traveled north-northwest on Hemphill Street and Northside Drive. All of SR 3E in the northern part of Atlanta was hard surfaced. From the north part of the city to the northwest part, the highway had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[22][23] Later that year, all of SR 3E from Atlanta to northwest of the Fulton–Cobb county line had a completed hard surface.[23][27]

In 1940, nearly the entire segment of SR 3E in Marietta had a completed hard surface. It was under construction from northwest of the Fulton–Cobb county line to the eastern part of Marietta.[28][29] By the end of the next year, the entire length of SR 3E had a completed hard surface.[30][31] By February 1948, SR 3E was moved off of Hemphill Avenue. It, along with US 41 Temp., followed US 19 on Spring Street, then traveled west on 14th Street and resumed the Northside Drive path.[6][17] By April 1949, US 41 Temp./SR 3E's southbound lanes traveled on Hemphill Avenue.[17][12] By the middle of 1950, US 41 Temp./SR 3E was shifted off of US 19 on Spring Street and 14th Street, and traveled on Hemphill Avenue again.[12][13] In 1952, US 41 Temp. was redesignated as part of the US 41 mainline.[32][33] In 1985, SR 3E was decommissioned.[26][4]

State Route 3S (Marietta) edit

 

State Route 3S

LocationMarietta
Existed1965[18][34]–1980[16][35][36][37]

State Route 3S (SR 3S) was a state highway that existed in the city limits of Marietta in Cobb County, Georgia. By the end of 1965, it was designated from SR 3 to SR 5.[18][34] Between 1974[16][35] and March 1980, SR 3S was redesignated as SR 3 Spur.[36][37]

State Route 4 (1919–1929) edit

 

State Route 4

LocationAlabamaCartersville
Existed1919[8]–1929[10][11]

State Route 4 (SR 4) was a state highway that was formed at least as early as 1919.[8] It began at the Alabama state line, traveled to the east-southeast and intersected SR 1 in Rome. It then curved to the southeast and reached its eastern terminus, an intersection with SR 3 in Cartersvile. By the end of 1921, SR 4 was extended southeast into the main part of Cartersville, on a concurrency with SR 3 and headed north-northeast to an intersection with SR 2/SR 53 in Fairmount.[8][9] By the end of 1926, almost all of the Alabama–Rome segment, and the southern half of the 1921 extension, had a "sand clay or top soil" surface. In the vicinity of Rome, the highway had a "completed hard surface". About half of the Rome–Cartersville segment was under construction. The easternmost part of this segment, and nearly the entire SR 3 concurrency, had a "completed semi hard surface".[9][10] By the end of 1929, the entire length of the original segment of SR 4 was redesignated as SR 20, with US 41W designated along the Rome–Cartersville segment. US 41 was designated along the former SR 3 concurrency. The 1921 extension was redesignated as SR 61.[10][11] SR 4 was reused on that same day as a redesignation of parts of SR 15, SR 17, and SR 24.

State Route 7W edit

 

State Route 7W

LocationCrisp County
Existed1963[14][18]–1985[3][4]

State Route 7W (SR 7W) was a state highway that existed in the south-central part of the state. Between June 1960 and June 1963, the path of SR 7 through the Cordele area was split into SR 7W and SR 7E. SR 7W traveled through the western part of the city.[14][18] In 1985, it was decommissioned.[3][4]

The entire route was in Crisp County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
  
 
 
 
US 41 / SR 7 south / SR 7E north
Southern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E; northern terminus of southern segment of SR 7
Cordele   US 280 / SR 30
  
 
 
 
US 41 / SR 7 north / SR 7E south
Northern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E; southern terminus of northern segment of SR 7
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 7E edit

 

State Route 7E

LocationCrisp County
Existed1963[14][18]–1985[3][4]

State Route 7E (SR 7E) was a state highway that existed in the south-central part of the state. Between June 1960 and June 1963, the path of SR 7 through the Cordele area was split into SR 7W and SR 7E. SR 7E traveled through the main part of the city, concurrent with US 41.[14][18] In 1985, it was redesignated as part of the SR 7 mainline.[3][4]

The entire route was in Crisp County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
  
 
 
 
US 41 / SR 7 south / SR 7W north
Southern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E; northern terminus of southern segment of SR 7
Cordele   US 280 / SR 30
 
 
SR 257 north
Southern terminus of SR 257
  
 
 
 
US 41 / SR 7 north / SR 7E south
Northern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E; southern terminus of northern segment of SR 7
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 9E edit

 

State Route 9E

LocationForsyth, Dawson, and Lumpkin counties
Length21.319 mi[38] (34.310 km)
Existed1941[39][30]–1981[40][41]

State Route 9E (SR 9E) was a 21.319-mile-long (34.310 km) state highway. It was originally constructed early in 1941.[39][30] In July 1981, as the extension of SR 400 had reached SR 60 south-southeast of Dahlonega, this designation was decommissioned.[40][41]

The routing that was followed by SR 9E starts where Hopewell Road splits from the current SR 9 north-northeast of Coal Mountain in Forsyth County, and parallels SR 400 very closely. The road changes names to Lumpkin Campground Road as it enters Dawson County, passes by the North Georgia Premium Outlet Mall, then crosses SR 53 and SR 400 in rapid succession. Just before intersecting with SR 136 the road changes names again to Harmony Church Road, then is called Auraria Road as it becomes SR 136. The road crosses SR 400 once more to its west, parts ways with SR 136, then travels north through the community of Auraria into Lumpkin County to its northern terminus at SR 9/SR 52 west of Dahlonega.[38] [42]

State Route 11E edit

 

State Route 11E

LocationBibb County
Existed1953[33][25]–1963[14][18]

State Route 11E (SR 11E) was a state highway that existed entirely within Bibb County in the Macon metropolitan area. It functioned like an eastern alternate route of US 41/SR 11/SR 49. In 1953, it was established from US 41/SR 11/SR 49/SR 247 south-southwest of Macon to US 41/SR 11/SR 49 in the city.[33][25] Between June 1960 and June 1963, SR 49 was shifted eastward, off of US 41/SR 11 and replacing SR 11E.[14][18]

State Route 13W edit

 

State Route 13W

LocationFulton and DeKalb counties
Existed1946[5][6]–1971[43][44]

State Route 13W (SR 13W) was a state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area. Between the beginning of 1945 and November 1946, it was established from US 19/SR 9 north of Atlanta to the southwestern corner of North Atlanta.[5][6] Between February 1948 and April 1949, its northern terminus was extended to US 23/SR 13 east-northeast of North Atlanta.[17][12] In 1971, SR 13W was redesignated as part of SR 141 (Peachtree Road/Peachtree Industrial Boulevard) and SR 13 Conn.[43][44]


CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
FultonBuckhead   US 19 / SR 9 (Peachtree Road)Southern terminus
  SR 237 (Piedmont Road)
DeKalbDoraville 
 
SR 141 north
Southern terminus of SR 141
   US 23 / SR 13 (Buford Highway)Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 15W edit

 

State Route 15W

LocationAthens
Existed1946[5][6]–1949[17][12]

State Route 15W (SR 15W) was a short-lived state highway that existed completely within the city limits of Athens. It functioned like a bypass of downtown. Between the beginning of 1945 and November 1946, it was established from US 129/US 441/SR 15/SR 24 north-northwest to US 129/SR 15.[5][6] Between February 1948 and April 1949, the path of SR 15 was shifted westward, replacing SR 15W.[17][12][failed verification]

The entire route was in Athens, Clarke County.

mikmDestinationsNotes
     US 129 / US 441 / SR 15 / SR 24Southern terminus
     US 29 / US 78 / SR 8 / SR 10
   US 129 / SR 15Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 16S edit

 

State Route 16S

LocationJefferson, Glascock, and Warren counties
Existed1942[31][45]–1952[32][33]

State Route 16S (SR 16S) was a state highway that existed in portions of Jefferson, Glascock, and Warren counties. In 1942, it was established from an intersection with SR 16 west-northwest of Wrens to another intersection with SR 16 southeast of Warrenton.[31][45] A decade later, the path of SR 16 southeast of Warrenton was shifted southward, replacing the path of SR 16S. The portion from southeast of Warrenton to northwest of Wrens was redesignated as SR 16 Conn., while the portion from northwest of Wrens to north of Louisville was redesignated as SR 16 Conn.[32][33]


CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Jefferson  SR 16Southern terminus
Glascock
No major junctions
Warren  SR 16Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 20 (1919–1921) edit

 

State Route 20

LocationGraySparta
Existed1919[8]–1921[8][9]

State Route 20 (SR 20) was a very short-lived state highway that traveled from Gray to Sparta. It was formed at least as early as 1919[8] and was decommissioned in 1921 and redesignated SR 22.[8][9] It began at an intersection with SR 11 in Gray. It traveled to the east-northeast and entered Milledgeville, where it intersected SR 24 and SR 29. It then went northeast to Sparta, where it met its eastern terminus, an intersection with SR 15 and SR 16. SR 20 was reused that same year on a different road (see below).

State Route 20 (1921–1929) edit

 

State Route 20

LocationLouisvilleWaynesboro
Existed1921[8][9]–1929[10][11]

State Route 20 (SR 20) was a state highway in the east-central part of the state. At least as early as 1919, part of SR 24 was established from Louisville to Waynesboro.[8] By the end of September 1921, the path of SR 24, from Waynesboro to Louisville, was shifted northwestward. The former path of SR 24 was redesignated as SR 20.[8][9] Between October 1926 and October 1929, the path of SR 24, from Augusta to Louisville, was reverted to the Waynesboro–Louisville path, replacing SR 20. SR 24's former path, on US 1, was redesignated as part of SR 4.[10][11] SR 20 was reused on that same day as a redesignation of most of the original SR 4.


CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
JeffersonLouisville    US 1 / SR 17 / SR 24Western terminus
Burke 
 
SR 56 south
Northern terminus of SR 56
Waynesboro  SR 21Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 26E edit

 

State Route 26E

LocationTybee Island
Existed1969[46][47]–1985[3][4]

State Route 26E (SR 26E) was a state highway that existed in the eastern part of Chatham County, in Savannah Beach, which is what Tybee Island was known as at the time. The roadway that would eventually become SR 26E was established between June 1963 and the end of 1965, as SR 26 Loop, between two intersections with US 80/SR 26 in the southern part of the city.[18][34] In 1969, it was redesignated as SR 26E.[46][47] In 1985, SR 26E was decommissioned.[3][4]

The entire route was in Savannah Beach, Chatham County.

mikmDestinationsNotes
   US 80 / SR 26Western terminus
   US 80 / SR 26Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 27S edit

 

State Route 27S

LocationDodge County
Existed1965[18][34]–1977[48][49]

State Route 27S (SR 27S) was a state highway that existed in the central part of Dodge County, southwest of Eastman. Between June 1963 and the end of 1965, it was established from US 341/SR 27 west of Eastman to US 23/US 341/SR 27 southeast of the city.[18][34] In 1977, it became the new route of US 341/SR 27.[48][49]

The entire route was in Dodge County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
   US 341 / SR 27Western terminus
    US 23 / US 341 / SR 27Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 28 (1919–1937) edit

 

State Route 28

LocationGeorgetownVienna
Existed1919[8]–1937[22][23]

State Route 28 (SR 28) was a state highway that traveled from Georgetown to Vienna. It was established at least as early as 1919[8] and was decommissioned in 1937.[22][23] It began at an intersection with SR 39 in Georgetown. It traveled to the northeast and intersected SR 1 in Lumpkin. It curved to the east-southeast through Preston. In Americus, the highway intersected SR 3 and SR 26. It headed to the east and entered Vienna, where it met its eastern terminus, an intersection with SR 7. By the end of 1926, a segment just east of Preston was under construction. The eastern half of the Preston–Americus segment had a completed hard surface. The Dooly County portion of the highway had a sand clay or topsoil surface.[9][10] By the end of 1929, a segment just east of Lumpkin and a segment just west of Preston had a sand clay or topsoil surface.[10][11] By the middle of 1930, SR 28 was extended northeast from Vienna to Hawkinsville.[11][50] A few months later, the Richland–Preston segment was under construction.[50][51] By 1932, US 280 was designated on the Richland–Americus segment.[51][52] Near the end of the year, the entire Vienna–Hawkinsville segment had a sand clay or topsoil surface.[53][54] By the end of 1937, s segment just southwest of Hawkinsville had a completed hard surface.[24][22] Just a few months later, all of SR 28 had been redesignated as SR 27.[22][23] This was done so that SR 28 could be reused on former SR 52 and SR 105 to match South Carolina.

State Route 34 (1919–1926) edit

 

State Route 34

LocationCarrolltonVilla Rica
Existed1919[8]–1926[9][10]

State Route 34 (SR 34) was a short-lived state highway in the western part of the state. It was established at least as early as 1919[8] and was decommissioned in 1926.[9][10] When it was established, it extended from SR 1 and SR 16 in Carrollton to SR 8 in Villa Rica. In 1926, its entire length consisted of a "sand clay or top soil" surface and was redesignated as a southern branch of SR 8.[9][10] Within three years, US 78S had been designated along the path of SR 8's southern branch.[10][11] A decade later, US 78S had been redesignated as US 78 Alt.[23][27] Nearly another decade later, SR 8 had been redesignated as SR 8 Alt.[6][17] By the beginning of 1953, US 78 Alt. had been decommissioned.[32][33] By the middle of 1954, SR 8 Alt. had been redesignated as SR 166 from Carrollton to northeast of the city and SR 61 from that point to Villa Rica, as they travel today.[25][1] SR 34 was reused in 1930 along part of its current route.

State Route 36 (1919–1941) edit

 

State Route 36

LocationCommerceSouth Carolina state line east-southeast of Elberton
Existed1919[8]–1941[30][31]

State Route 36 (SR 36) was a state highway that originally existed from Danielsville to Elberton, when it was established at least as early as 1919.[8] By the middle of 1930, its western terminus was shifted southwestward into Athens.[11][50] By the end of the year, the western terminus had been reverted to Danielsville and extended northwest to Commerce. The Athens–Comer segment was redesignated as SR 82.[50][51] In 1941, SR 82 west of Comer and the Comer–South Carolina segment of SR 36 had been redesignated as SR 72, while the Commerce–Comer segment of SR 36 had been redesignated as an extension of SR 98. That same day, the old SR 72 was redesignated as SR 36.[30][31]

State Route 42A edit

 

State Route 42A

LocationAtlanta
Existed1941[30][31]–1946[5][6]

State Route 42A (SR 42A) was a state highway in Atlanta. It was entirely concurrent with US 29/US 78/SR 8/SR 10/SR 12 (Ponce de Leon Avenue). It was formed in 1941[30][31] and decommissioned only five years later, in 1946.[5][6] It began at an intersection with US 19/SR 9 in the northern part of the city. From there, US 29/US 78/SR 8/SR 10/SR 12/SR 42A traveled to the east to an intersection with SR 42. Here, SR 42A ended, and US 29/US 78/SR 8/SR 10/SR 12 continued to the east.

State Route 43 (1919–1941) edit

 

State Route 43

LocationAtlanta
Existed1919[8]–1941[30][31]

State Route 43 (SR 43) was a state highway that originally existed from a point north-northwest of Gainesville, north-northeast to Cleveland, and then northwest to Turners Corner, when it was established at least as early as 1919.[8] Its original southern terminus was at SR 11 north-northwest of Gainesville, and its original northern terminus was at SR 9 in Turners Corner.[8] By the end of 1921, SR 11 and SR 43 were swapped in this area. SR 11 took over the entire route of SR 43, while SR 43 was shifted to travel from a point north-northeast of Gainesville northwest to SR 9 just northeast of Dahlonega.[8][9] By the end of 1926, the southern part of the new path had a sand clay or top soil surface, and the rest of it had a completed semi hard surface.[9][10] By the end of 1929, the Lumpkin County portion of the highway had a completed hard surface.[10][11] By the middle of the next year, all of the highway was completed.[11][50] In 1941, SR 43 was redesignated as SR 52.[30][31] Note that SR 43 was reused on former SR 70 to match South Carolina that same day.

State Route 44 (1919–1921) edit

 

State Route 44

LocationAlabama state line northwest of JakinBrinson
Existed1919[8]–1921[8][9]

State Route 44 (SR 44) was a short-lived state highway that only existed from the Alabama state line, northwest of Jakin, to Brinson. It was established at least as early as 1919,[8] and was decommissioned by the end of 1921.[8][9] It was redesignated as part of SR 38.[8][9] SR 44 was reused in 1921 along part of its current route.

State Route 45 (1919–1926) edit

 

State Route 45

LocationAvondale Estates–west-southwest of Athens
Existed1919[8]–1926[9][10]

State Route 45 (SR 45) was a short-lived state highway in the north-central part of the state. It was established at least as early as 1919 on a path from SR 8 and SR 13 in Lawrenceville, south-southeast to Loganville, east-southeast to SR 11 in Monroe, and east-northeast to SR 15 in Watkinsville.[8] By the end of 1921, the Lawrenceville–Loganville segment was redesignated as a southern extension of SR 13, the western terminus was extended west-southwest to what was known as "Ingleside" (now known as Avondale Estates), and the eastern terminus was shifted to the northwest to end at SR 8 west-southwest of Athens.[8][9] By the end of 1926, the segment from Ingleside (now labeled as "Avondale") to Loganville and the segment from Monroe to the Athens area were redesignated as US 78/SR 10, while the Loganville–Monroe segment was also redesignated as US 78 and SR 13 (and possibly SR 10).[9][10] SR 45 was reused in 1930 along part of its current route.

State Route 46 (1919–1921) edit

 

State Route 46

LocationSylvesterTifton
Existed1919[8]–1921[8][9]

State Route 46 (SR 46) was a short-lived state highway that started at SR 32 and SR 33 in Sylvester to SR 7 and SR 35 in Tifton. It was established at least as early as 1919.[8] By the end of 1921, the entire highway was redesignated as part of SR 50.[8][9] SR 46 was reused in 1921 along part of its current route.

State Route 50N edit

 

State Route 50N

LocationAlbany
Existed1963[14][18]–1973[15][16]

State Route 50N (SR 50N) was a state highway that existed in the city limits of Albany, within Dougherty County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 50N was established at least as early as 1919 as SR 32 from Dawson through Albany and into Sylvester.[8] By the end of 1921, SR 50 was designated across the state. This truncated SR 32 at Ashburn.[8][9] By the end of 1926, the portion of SR 50 in the eastern part of Albany had a "completed hard surface".[9][10]

By the middle of 1930, from west of Albany to the Worth–Tift county line, the highway had a completed hard surface. The western half of the Dougherty County portion of the Dawson–Albany segment had a completed semi hard surface.[11][50] In January 1932, the Dawson–Albany segment had a completed hard surface.[52][55]

Between February 1948 and April 1949, US 82 was designated on SR 50 through the Albany area.[17][12] Between June 1960 and June 1963, the path of SR& 50 through Albany was split into SR 50N and SR 50S. SR 50N used Broad Avenue and Sylvester Road, while US 82/SR 50S used Oglethorpe Avenue and Albany Expressway.[14][18] In 1973, SR 50N was redesignated as SR 50 Conn., while SR 50S was redesignated as the SR 50 mainline.[15][16]

State Route 50S edit

 

State Route 50S

LocationAlbany
Existed1963[14][18]–1973[15][16]

State Route 50S (SR 50S) was a state highway that existed in the city limits of Albany, within Dougherty County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 50S was established at least as early as 1919 as SR 32 from Dawson through Albany and into Sylvester.[8] By the end of 1921, SR 50 was designated across the state. This truncated SR 32 at Ashburn.[8][9] By the end of 1926, the portion of SR 50 in the eastern part of Albany had a "completed hard surface".[9][10]

By the middle of 1930, from west of Albany to the Worth–Tift county line, the highway had a completed hard surface. The western half of the Dougherty County portion of the Dawson–Albany segment had a completed semi hard surface.[11][50] In January 1932, the Dawson–Albany segment had a completed hard surface.[52][55]

Between February 1948 and April 1949, US 82 was designated on SR 50 through the Albany area.[17][12] Between June 1960 and June 1963, the path of SR& 50 through Albany was split into SR 50N and SR 50S. SR 50N used Broad Avenue and Sylvester Road, while US 82/SR 50S used Oglethorpe Avenue and Albany Expressway.[14][18] In 1973, SR 50N was redesignated as SR 50 Conn., while SR 50S was redesignated as the SR 50 mainline.[15][16]

State Route 51 (1919–1921) edit

 

State Route 51

LocationAlbany
Existed1919[8]–1921[8][9]

State Route 51 (SR 51) was a state highway in Fannin County. Between 1919 and 1920, SR 51 was designated from Blue Ridge to the Tennessee state line.[8] By the end of 1921, the entire highway was redesignated as part of SR 5.[8][9] Note that the SR 51 number was reused in 1921 along part of the current highway.

State Route 52 (1921–1937) edit

 

State Route 52

LocationColumbiaRichmond counties
Existed1921[8][9]–1937[22][23]

State Route 52 (SR 52) was a state highway in Columbia and Richmond counties, in the Augusta metropolitan area. Between 1919 and 1921, SR 52 was designated from the South Carolina state line, northwest of Augusta, and the South Carolina state line again on the northeastern edge of the city.[8][9] Before 1926 ended, the entire length of SR 52 had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[9][10] By the middle of 1930, in an area northwest of Augusta, SR 52 was shifted to a more western alignment. This segment was located about half of the distance from the Columbia–Richmond county line and the original segment. The original part northwest of the split did not have a highway number. The highway had a "completed hard surface" from there to Augusta.[11][50] The year ended with all of SR 52 having a "completed hard surface". The original part's Richmond County portion did, too.[50][51] By February 1932, the entire length of the highway had a completed hard surface.[52][55] Near the end of the year, the northwestern part of SR 52 was shifted back to its original alignment and re-signed as SR 52. The western extended part was re-designated as SR 104.[56][57] Before 1938, all of SR 52 was redesignated as the southern segment of SR 28.[22][23]

State Route 54B edit

 

State Route 54B

LocationSharpsburgFayetteville
Existed1921[8][9]–1934[58][59]

State Route 54B (SR 54B) was a state highway just south of Atlanta. When it was established in between 1919 and 1921, it extended from an intersection with SR 16 in Sharpsburg northeast to an intersection with SR 54 in Fayetteville.[8][9] By the end of 1926, the northern half had a sand clay or top soil surface.[9][10] Nearly a decade later, the entire length of SR 54B was redesignated as a re-routing of the SR 54 mainline.[58][59]

State Route 56 Spur edit

 

State Route 56 Spur

LocationAugusta
Length6.6 mi[60] (10.6 km)
Existed2014[61][62]

State Route 56 Spur (SR 56 Spur) was a 6.6-mile-long (10.6 km) spur route that existed entirely within the southeastern part of Richmond County. Its route was entirely within the city limits of Augusta. Its west–east section was part of Tobacco Road. It was known as Doug Barnard Parkway for the rest of its length. Its entire length was within the city limits of Augusta. Its southern terminus was at an intersection with the SR 56 mainline (Mike Padgett Highway). Its northern terminus was at an intersection with US 1/US 25/US 78/US 278/SR 10/SR 121 (Gordon Highway) in downtown Augusta. Here, the roadway continues as Molly Pond Road.[60] The highway was decommissioned in 2014.[61][62]

State Route 60 (1921–1926) edit

 

State Route 60

LocationSterling
Existed1921[8][9]–1926[9][10]

State Route 60 (SR 60) was a short-lived state highway in the southeastern part of the state. When it was established between 1919 and 1921, it extended from SR 27 in Sterling northeast to an intersection with SR 25 south-southwest of Darien.[8][9] By the end of 1926, the highway was removed from the state highway system.[9][10] This short segment of highway would later be used as part of SR 131 in 1939, in which this section became part of SR 99, and SR 131 was shifted further north.[45][63]

State Route 60 (1930–1940) edit

 

State Route 60

LocationSocial Circle
Existed1930[50][51]–1940[29][64]

State Route 60 (SR 60) was a very short state highway that existed entirely within Walton County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 60 was built between 1921 and the end of 1926 as an unnumbered road from SR 11 in Social Circle to SR 12 southeast of the city. The entire length of the highway had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[9][10] In 1930, this road was designated as SR 60.[50][51] At the end of 1940, SR 60 was redesignated as SR 181.[29][64] It later became SR 213 one year later. This portion became part of SR 229, which along with SR 213, was decommissioned in the 1980s. SR 60 was reused as a renumbering of former SR 86, and SR 86 was reused to renumber the duplicate SR 160.

State Route 62 (1926–1929) edit

 

State Route 62

LocationTalmoHomer
Existed1926[9][10]–1929[10][11]

State Route 62 (SR 62) was a short-lived state highway in the northeastern part of the state. It was proposed between 1919 and 1921 on a path from SR 11 at a point northwest of Jefferson, at approximately the location of Talmo, northeast to SR 15 in Homer.[8][9] By the end of 1926, SR 62 was established on this same path, with US 129 having been applied onto SR 11.[9][10] Within three years, this short highway had been decommissioned.[10][11]

State Route 63 (1921–1967) edit

 

State Route 63

LocationFancy Hall–Pembroke
Existed1921[8][9]–1967[65][66]

State Route 63 (SR 63) was a state highway that existed in the east-central part of the state. When it was established between 1919 and 1921, it only extended from SR 30 in Ellabell to SR 26 at a point that approximates today's location of Eden.[8][9] By the end of 1926, its termini were shifted to SR 30 in Lanier to US 80/SR 26 in Blitchton.[9][10] By the end of 1929, the highway's western portion had a "sand clay or top soil" surface, while its eastern portion was under construction. Also, the western terminus was shifted again, to Pembroke.[10][11] The next year, the eastern portion had a sand clay or top soil surface.[11][50] At the end of the year, US 280 was designated along the entire path of SR 63.[51][52] Before 1934 ended, the western portion had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[58][59] Just a few months later the eastern portion of SR 63 was under the same condition.[67][68] About six months later, the eastern terminus area had a completed hard surface.[69][70] Near the end of 1936, the rest of the highway also had a completed hard surface.[71][72] About a year later, SR 30's length southeast of Pembroke was swapped with the entire length of SR 63. That meant that SR 63 easternmost terminus was now at US 17/SR 25 southeast of Clyde. The portion of this "new" path just southeast of Pembroke, as well as the entire segment southeast of Clyde, was under construction.[24][22] Within a year, those under construction segments had completed grading, but were not surfaced.[23][27] By the middle of 1939, a small portion of the highway farther to the southeast of Pembroke had the same conditions.[27][73] Before the year ended, the rest of the highway's length also had the same conditions.[74][75] A few months later, most of the highway's length that today is within the boundaries of Fort Stewart was under construction.[75][28] Later in 1940, the segment from US 17/SR 25 to SR 144 southeast of Clyde had a completed hard surface.[29][64] About five years later, Fort Stewart was established. Most of the state highways that traveled within the area now covered by the base were removed. Due to this, SR 63 was split into two short segments: one from the northern edge of the base to Pembroke and one from Richmond Hill to the southeastern edge of the base.[5][6] By the end of 1948, state highways were re-established through the base, thereby reconnecting SR 63 as a single highway.[6][17] One year later, the eastern terminus of the highway was extended south-southeast to Fancy Hall.[12][13] Before 1953 ended, the Keller–Richmond Hill segment was hard surfaced.[33][25] In 1954, the segment from the northern edge of Fort Stewart to Pembroke was hard surfaced.[25][1] At the end of the decade, the Fancy Hall–Keller segment was paved.[7][14] Before 1966 began SR 63 Spur had been established from SR 63 southeast of Richmond Hill east to Fort McAllister.[18][34] In 1967, SR 67's path south of Pembroke was shifted to the east, taking over the entire path of SR 63; therefore, SR 63 Spur was redesignated as SR 67 Spur.[65][66]

State Route 63 Spur edit

 

State Route 63 Spur

LocationSoutheast of Richmond HillFort McAllister
Existed1966[18][34]–1967[65][66]

State Route 63 Spur (SR 63 Spur) was a short-lived spur route of SR 63. Before 1966 began, SR 63 Spur was established from the SR 63 mainline southeast of Richmond Hill east to Fort McAllister.[18][34] In 1967, SR 67's path south of Pembroke was shifted to the east, taking over the entire path of SR 63; therefore, SR 63 Spur was redesignated as SR 67 Spur.[65][66] In the middle 1970s, SR 144 was extended east and south-southeast, taking over the route of SR 67 southeast of Fort Stewart; therefore, SR 67 was redesignated as SR 144 Spur.[16][35]

State Route 63 (1968–1986) edit

 

State Route 63

LocationGlennville, Georgia
Existed1968–1986

State Route 63 (SR 63) went from SR 144 to SR 196. This was cancelled in 1986. It does not show on any official GDOT state maps, but is on some online maps. The SR 63 was reused in 1989 along the current highway.

State Route 65 (1921–1926) edit

 

State Route 65

LocationRabun County
Existed1921[8][9]–1926[9][10]

State Route 65 (SR 65) was a state highway that formerly exited in the extreme northeastern part of the state. At least as early as 1919, a local road was established between the North Carolina and South Carolina state lines in Rabun County.[8] By 1921, this road was designated as SR 65.[8][9] By the end of 1926, this was cancelled.[10] In 1932, this route was restored as SR 105.[56][57] This roadway would eventually be redesignated as the northern segment of SR 28.[22][23] SR 65 was reused on an unrelated route (no longer part of the current route) in 1932.

State Route 68 (1921–1932) edit

 

State Route 68

LocationCummingBuford
Existed1921[8][9]–January 1932[52][55]

State Route 68 (SR 68) was a short-lived state highway in the north-central part of the state. When it was established between 1919 and 1921, it extended from SR 9 in Cumming southeast to SR 13 in Buford.[8][9] In January 1932, SR 68 was decommissioned and redesignated as part of SR 20.[52][55] SR 68 was reused for part of its current route by March 1932.

State Route 69 edit

 

State Route 69

LocationTowns County
Existed1930[50][51]–1960[7][14]

State Route 69 (SR 69) was a very short state highway located entirely in Towns County in the extreme northern part of the state. The highway traveled from US 76/SR 2 north to the North Carolina state line, where it became North Carolina Highway 69 (NC 69). SR 69 followed the roadway currently designated as the concurrency of SR 17/SR 515. It was formed in 1930,[50][51] and was redesignated as part of SR 17 between 1957 and 1960.[7][14]

Between 1919 and 1921, the roadway that would eventually become SR 69 was established as an unnumbered road from SR 2 in Hiawassee to the North Carolina state line north of Hiawassee.[8][9] By the end of 1930, this road was designated as SR 69, with a completed semi hard surface.[50][51] A few years later, the highway's location was shifted a few miles to the west. Its southern terminus was still at SR 2, but began northwest of Hiawassee, as it currently travels.[58][59] By the end of 1935, the highway had a completed hard surface.[70][76] Twenty years later, SR 17 north of US 76/SR 2 was shifted to the west to travel concurrently with SR 69.[1][2] Between 1957 and 1960, SR 69 was decommissioned, while SR 17 stayed on this segment of highway.[7][14]

State Route 70 (1932–1941) edit

 

State Route 70

LocationLincolnton
Existed1932[51][54]–1941[30][31]

State Route 70 (SR 70) was a state highway that existed in the east-central part of the state. When it was established between 1930 and 1932, it extended from Lincolnton to the South Carolina state line. At this time, the highway was under construction.[51][54] In early 1934, SR 70 was extended south-southwest to US 78/SR 10/SR 17 north-northwest of Thomson.[77][78] By the end of 1937, the segment of SR 70 from Lincolnton to the South Carolina state line had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[22][23] In 1938, a small portion of the highway southwest of Lincolnton had a "completed hard surface".[23][27] Late in 1941, all of SR 70 was redesignated as SR 43 to match South Carolina.[30][31] SR 70 was not reused until 1968, when a county road and part of SR 74 was renumbered to SR 70.


State Route 72 (1930–1941) edit

 

State Route 72

LocationWoodlandCovington
Existed1930[11][50]–1941[30][31]

State Route 72 (SR 72) was a state highway in the west-central and central parts of the state. It was established in 1930 on a path from US 19/SR 3 north-northwest of Thomaston to SR 18 in Barnesville.[11][50] Later that year, the western terminus was shifted southward into Thomaston.[50][51] At the end of 1933, SR 72 was extended northeast to Jackson.[79][80] A few months later, it was extended again, this time north-northeast to Covington.[78][58] Three years later, the entire length of the Thomaston–Barnesville segment had a "completed hard surface".[81][24] Later that year, SR 72 was extended southwest to SR 41 in Woodland.[24][22] The next year, the eastern terminus was under construction.[23][27] By the middle of 1939, the then-western terminus had a completed hard surface. At this time, the then-eastern terminus had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[27][73] Near the end of 1940, SR 72 was extended north-northwest along SR 41 to Manchester and then west-northwest to SR 85 in Warm Springs. It was possibly also extended west-southwest to US 27/SR 1 in Pine Mountain, but GDOT maps didn't show a highway number for this segment of highway. The entire extension had a completed hard surface. Meanwhile, the eastern terminus was under construction.[28][29] By the end of the year, the eastern terminus had a completed hard surface.[29][64] A few months later, the entire Newton County portion that didn't have a hard surface was under construction.[64][39] By the end of 1941, the entire highway was redesignated as SR 36. The Newton County portion that didn't have a hard surface had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[30][31] SR 72 was reused as a renumbering of most of old SR 36 and part of SR 82 to match South Carolina. The rest of SR 36 became an extension of SR 98.

State Route 73W edit

 

State Route 73W

LocationBulloch County
Existed1960[7][14]–1993[82][83]

State Route 73W (SR 73W) was a state highway that existed in the southwestern part of Bulloch County. Between July 1957 and June 1960, it was established and paved between two intersections with US 25/US 301/SR 73. It traveled north-northwest to an intersection with SR 46 and then northeast to its northern terminus.[7][14] In 1993, it was decommissioned.[82][83]

The entire route was in Bulloch County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
   
 
 
 
US 25 / US 301 / SR 73 south / SR 73E north
Southern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E; northern terminus of southern segment of SR 73
  SR 46
   
 
 
 
US 25 / US 301 / SR 73 north / SR 73E south
Northern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E; southern terminus of northern segment of SR 73
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 73E edit

 

State Route 73E

LocationBulloch County
Existed1960[7][14]–1993[82][83]

State Route 73E (SR 73E) was a state highway that existed in the southwestern part of Bulloch County. Between July 1957 and June 1960, it was established on US 25/US 301 as a redesignation of SR 73. It straddled the intersection with SR 46/SR 119.[7][14] In 1993, it was reverted to be part of SR 73.[82][83]

The entire route was in Bulloch County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
   
 
 
 
US 25 / US 301 / SR 73 south / SR 73W north
Southern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E; northern terminus of southern segment of SR 73
   SR 46 / SR 119
   
 
 
 
US 25 / US 301 / SR 73 north / SR 73W south
Northern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E; southern terminus of northern segment of SR 73
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 85W edit

 

State Route 85W

LocationSouth of ShilohWoodbury
Existed1952[13][32]–1995[84][85]

State Route 85W (SR 85W) was a state highway that existed from south of Shiloh to Woodbury. The highway that would eventually become SR 85W was established in 1930 as part of SR 85 from south of Shiloh to SR 41 in Warm Springs.[11][50] By the middle of 1933, the portion of the highway from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[54][86] The next year, the segment of the highway just south-southwest of Warm Springs was shifted westward to a curve into the city.[58][59] At the end of 1936, two segments were under construction: around Shiloh and just west-southwest of Warm Springs.[72][87] By the middle of 1937, a portion from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs was under construction.[81][24] Near the end of the year, part of the Waverly Hall–Warm Springs segment had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[24][22] By the end of 1939, the segment from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs had a completed hard surface.[74][75]

In 1940, SR 163 was built from Warm Springs to Woodbury.[28][29] By the middle of 1941, SR 163's segment just northeast of Warm Springs was under construction.[39][30] In 1942, a portion of SR 163 northeast of Warm Springs had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[31][45] By the end of 1946, SR 85 was shifted eastward to a more direct path between Columbus and Manchester. Its old path between south of Shiloh and Warm Springs was redesignated as a southerly extension of SR 163.[5][6]

By the middle of 1950, US 27 Alt. was designated on SR 163 from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs.[12][13] By 1952, SR 163 was redesignated as SR 85W.[13][32] That year, SR 85W's segment south of Warm Springs was reverted to being designated as SR 163.[32][33] The next year, this was undone. Also, the segment of SR 85W from Warm Springs to Woodbury had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[33][25]

Between 1960 and 1963, US 27 Alt. was shifted eastward onto SR 85E from south of Shiloh to Manchester.[14][18] About thirty-three years later, SR 85W was redesignated SR 85 Alt.[84][85]

State Route 85E edit

 

State Route 85E

LocationSouth of ShilohWoodbury
Existed1957[2][7]–1995[84][85]

State Route 85E (SR 85E) was a state highway between south of Shiloh and Woodbury. In 1935, SR 85 was extended southeast on SR 41 to Manchester and then north-northeast through Woodbury.[68][69] At the end of 1936, part of SR 85 around Shiloh was under construction.[72][87]

In 1940, SR 85, from Manchester to approximately halfway between it and Woodbury, was under construction.[28][29] At the end of 1941, a portion of SR 85 just east-northeast of Manchester had a completed hard surface. At this time, a portion of the highway from south of Woodbury had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[30][31] In 1943, a portion northeast of Manchester had a completed hard surface.[45][63] The next year, a portion south of Woodbury had a sand clay or top soil surface.[63][5] By the end of 1946, SR 85 was shifted eastward to a more direct path between Columbus and Manchester. Its old path between south of Shiloh and Warm Springs was redesignated as a southerly extension of SR 163. The entire length of SR 85 from south of Shiloh to Chalybeate Springs had a completed hard surface. A small portion north-northeast of Chalybeate Springs had a sand clay or top soil surface; the portion from there to Woodbury had a completed hard surface.[5][6] Between 1946 and 1948, the Chalybeate Springs–Woodbury segment had a completed hard surface.[6][17]

Between 1955 and 1957, SR 85 from south of Shiloh to Woodbury was redesignated as SR 85E.[2][7] Between 1960 and 1963, US 27 Alt. was shifted eastward onto SR 85E from south of Shiloh to Manchester.[14][18] About thirty-two years later, SR 85E was redesignated as part of the SR 85 mainline again.[84][85]

State Route 86 (1930–1940) edit

 

State Route 86

LocationLumpkinFannin counties
Existed1930[50][51]–1940[29][64]

State Route 86 (SR 86) was a short-lived state highway in the North Georgia mountains region of the north-central part of the state. In 1930, SR 86 was established from Blue Ridge northeast to the North Carolina state line west-northwest of Ivy Log.[50][51] In January 1932, the entire length of SR 86 was under construction.[52][55] The next month, the western terminus of SR 86 was shifted eastward to begin northwest of Morganton.[55][88] By mid-1933, the portion of SR 86 from northwest of Morganton to Mineral Bluff had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[54][86] Later that year, the entire length of SR 86 had a completed semi hard surface.[89][90] In 1936, the entire length of SR 86 was under construction.[71][72] At the beginning of 1937, SR 86 was extended southeast to US 19/SR 9 in Porter Springs.[87][81] A few months later, SR 86's original segment had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[81][24] In late 1940, all of SR 86 was renumbered SR 60.[29][64] About 37 years later, the original segment of SR 86, from Mineral Bluff to the state line was used for the path of SR 60 Spur, because SR 60 was rerouted over SR 245, which was cancelled.[48][49] SR 86 was reused that same day as a renumbering of the duplicate SR 160.

State Route 91W edit

 

State Route 91W

LocationDougherty County
Existed1946[5][6]–1973[15][16]

State Route 91W (SR 91W) was a state highway in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Georgia. It functioned like an alternate route of SR 91. Between the beginning of 1945 and November 1946, it was established from SR 91 south-southwest of Albany to SR 3W just west of the city.[5][6] By February 1948, the entire length of the highway was hard surfaced.[6][17] In 1973, SR 234 was extended to the east, absorbing all of SR 91W.[15][16]

State Route 105 (1932–1937) edit

 

State Route 105

LocationRabun County
Existed1932[56][57]–1937[22][23]

State Route 105 (SR 105) was a state highway that existed entirely within Rabun County in the northeastern part of the state. The road that would eventually become SR 105 was established at least as early as 1919 between the North Carolina and South Carolina state lines.[8] By 1921, the highway was signed as SR 65.[8][9] This SR 65 was cancelled in 1926.[10] SR 105 was designated in late 1932.[56][57] By the end of 1934, the entire length of SR 105 was under construction.[58][59] By the middle of 1937, SR 105 had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[81][24] Before 1938, all of SR 105 was redesignated as the northern segment of SR 28.[22][23] SR 105 was reused on an unrelated route in 1938 (no longer part of its current route).

State Route 131 edit

 

State Route 131

LocationGlynnMcIntosh counties
Existed1936[76][71]–1989[21][91]

State Route 131 (SR 131) was a state highway that was located in Glynn and McIntosh counties in the coastal part of the state. The highway that would eventually become SR 131 was established between 1919 and 1921 as SR 60 from SR 27 north-northwest of Brunswick to SR 25 south-southwest of Darien.[8][9] By the end of 1926, it was decommissioned.[9][10] SR 131 was established in 1936 on what is currently SR 99 on an eastern curve between intersections with US 17/SR 25 in Darien and Eulonia.[76][71] Later that year, the portion from Darien to approximately Meridian was under construction.[71][72] In 1938, this segment had a "completed hard surface". From approximately Meridian to approximately Valona, the highway had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[23][27] In late 1939, SR 131 was established on a segment from US 84/SR 50 west-northwest of Brunswick to SR 32 northwest of Brunswick and on a segment from US 25/US 341/SR 27 southwest of Darien to US 17/SR 25 south-southwest of Darien. However, there is no indication if these were separate segments of the highway or extensions. The segment from approximately Valona to Eulonia was under construction.[74][75] A few months later, the northern terminus of the southern segment was shifted eastward to a southwest–northeast routing. Also, the western terminus of the central segment was shifted south-southwest to connect with SR 32 at US 25/US 341/SR 27 north-northwest of Brunswick.[75][28] By the end of 1941, the southern segment was under construction. The central segment was indicated to be "on system–not marked or maintained". The Valona–Eulonia segment of the northern segment had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[30][31] In 1943, the entire length of all three segments of SR 131 were redesignated as an extension of SR 99. SR 131 was moved to an alignment from South Newport to east-northeast of it. The entire length of this new segment had a completed hard surface.[45][63] By the end of 1946, the highway was extended east-southeast to the Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge. This extension had a completed hard surface.[5][6] By the end of the decade, SR 131 was extended west-southwest to Jones.[17][12] In 1953, the entire length of this extension had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[33][25] About a decade later, this segment was hard surfaced.[18][34] In 1977, it was decommissioned.[48][49] Twelve years later, the eastern part was decommissioned, as well.[21][91]

State Route 134 edit

 

State Route 134

LocationTelfairWheeler counties
Existed1937[87][81]–1988[21][20]

State Route 134 (SR 134) was a state highway that was located in Telfair and Wheeler counties. It was established in early 1937 from US 341/SR 27 southwest of Towns to SR 15 in Jordan.[87][81] This segment of highway remained virtually unchanged for over a decade, when it was given a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[6][17] By early 1949, SR 134 was established on a segment from SR 149 south-southeast of McRae to US 341/SR 27 northwest of Lumber City. However, there is no indication if the two segments were separate or were connected via a concurrency with US 341/SR 27 between them.[17][12] By the middle of 1950, US 23 was designated on US 341/SR 27 between the two segments.[12][13] In 1953, the original segment of SR 134 had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[33][25] The next year, this segment was hard surfaced.[25][1] Between 1957 and 1960, SR 15 at this segment's eastern end was shifted farther to the east. Its former path was redesignated as part of SR 19.[7][14] Between 1960 and 1963, the newer segment of SR 134 was paved.[14][18] It wasn't until 1988 that the entire length of the highway was decommissioned.[20][21]

State Route 143 edit

 

State Route 143

LocationDade, Walker, Gordon, and Pickens counties
Length61.044 mi[38] (98.241 km)
Existed1937[87][81]–1977[48][49]

State Route 143 (SR 143) was a state highway in the northwestern and north-central parts of the state.

The roadway that would eventually become SR 143 was established at least as early as 1919 as part of SR 1 from LaFayette to Trenton.[8] By the end of 1921, SR 1 west of LaFayette was shifted to the east and off its former alignment. SR 53 was indicated to be a "contingent road" from LaFayette to Calhoun, with a concurrency with SR 1 in LaFayette.[8][9] By the end of 1926, a portion of SR 53 northwest of Calhoun had a "completed semi hard surface".[9][10] The decade ended with SR 53's path west of Calhoun being shifted farther to the south. The segment of SR 53 that had existed from LaFayette to Villanow was redesignated as part of SR 2.[10][11]

In 1930, the portion of SR 2 from approximately Naomi to Villanow had a completed semi hard surface.[50][51] In February 1932, this segment's eastern end was shifted slightly to the north.[55][88] In 1934, SR 2 was extended to an undetermined point northwest of LaFayette.[58][59] A few years later, SR 143 was established on SR 53's former path from Vilanow to Calhoun.[87][81] Later that year, SR 2 was extended farther to the northwest. Its southeast part (northwest of LaFayette) was under construction, while its northwest part had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[24][22] By the middle of 1939, SR 2 was extended northwest to its intersection with SR 157. The western two-thirds of its length in this area had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[27][73] Near the end of the year, SR 2 was extended north-northwest to an intersection with US 11/SR 58 in Trenton. The eastern part of this extension was under construction.[74][75]

In early 1940, this last extension of SR 2 had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[75][28] Around the middle of the year, the portions of SR 2 both north-northwest and east-southeast of the SR 157 intersection had a "completed hard surface".[28][29] The next year, nearly the entire portion of SR 2 from just south-southeast of Trenton to just southeast of Cooper Heights had a completed hard surface.[64][39] Later that year, SR 143 was designated on an eastern alignment from SR 53 east of Fairmount to SR 5 and SR 53 in Tate.[39][30] By the end of 1946, SR 2 was extended to the Alabama state line. Also, its segment from LaFayette to Villanow was hard surfaced.[5][6] By early 1948, all of SR 2 west-southwest of Trenton, the entire western segment of SR 143, and the eastern half of the eastern segment of SR 143, had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface. The western half of its eastern segment was indicated to be "projected mileage".[6][17] By the middle of 1949, SR 2 was shifted much farther to the north. Its former alignment from the Alabama state line to Villanow was redesignated as a western extension of the western segment of SR 143. A portion northwest of LaFayette was hard surfaced.[17][12]

By the middle of 1950, a portion just east-southeast of Trenton was hard surfaced.[12][13] In 1953, the portion west-southwest of Trenton and the portion from Sugar Valley to Calhoun were hard surfaced. The eastern segment's portion east of the SR 156 intersection had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[33][25] The next year, this last segment was hard surfaced.[25][1] By mid-1955, the Gordon County segment of the western segment (from Villanow to Sugar Valley) and the portion of the eastern segment (west of the SR 156 intersection) had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[1][2]

By the end of 1960, the entire western segment was hard surfaced. Nearly the entire part of the eastern segment west of the SR 156 intersection was decommissioned.[7][14] By the end of 1963, the decommissioned part of the eastern segment was re-instated.[14][18] In 1970, a portion of the eastern segment southeast of the SR 53 intersection was hard surfaced.[47][43] In 1973, the portion of the eastern segment was decommissioned was indicated to be "under construction or projected mileage".[15][16] In 1977, all of the western segment from the Alabama state line to northwest of Sugar Valley was redesignated as part of SR 136. All of the western segment from northwest of Sugar Valley to Calhoun was redesignated as SR 136 Conn. The eastern segment from its western terminus to northeast of Sharp Top was redesignated as SR 379; northeast of this point to west of Tate was redesignated as part of SR 108; and from there to Tate was redesignated as SR 108 Conn.[48][49]

State Route 143 Connector edit

 

State Route 143 Connector

LocationGordon
Existed1972[44][15]–1977[48][49]

State Route 143 Connector (SR 143 Conn.) was a connecting route in the northwestern part of the state.

The roadway that would eventually become SR 143 Conn. was established between 1963 and 1966 as an unnumbered road from SR 143 northwest of Sugar Valley to Resaca.[18][34] In 1972 it was designated as SR 143 Conn., ending at US 41/SR 3.[44][15] In 1977, all of SR 143 west of a point northwest of Sugar Valley and all of SR 143 Conn. were redesignated as parts of SR 136.[48][49]

State Route 148 (1939–1949) edit

 

State Route 148

LocationFort OglethorpeRinggold
Existed1939[27][73]–1949[17][12]

State Route 148 (SR 148) was a state highway in the northwestern part of the state. The highway that would eventually become SR 148 was established between 1919 and the end of 1921 as an unnumbered road from SR 1 in Fort Oglethorpe to SR 3 in Ringgold.[8][9] By the end of 1926, US 41 was designated on SR 3. The entire length of the highway had a "completed semi hard surface".[9][10] In 1930, US 41W was designated on SR 1.[50][51] By the end of 1934, US 41W was decommissioned. It was redesignated as part of US 27.[59][67] By the middle of 1939, the unnumbered road was designated as SR 148.[27][73] 1940 ended with the entire length of SR 148 having a "completed hard surface".[29][64] By the end of 1949, SR 2 was shifted to the north, replacing the entire length of SR 148.[17][12]

State Route 148 (1955–1966) edit

 

State Route 148

LocationMonroe County
Existed1955[1][2]–1966[18][34]

State Route 148 (SR 148) was a state highway in the central part of the state. SR 148 was designated between the middle of 1954 and the middle of 1955 from SR 18 east-southeast of Forsyth to SR 87 eas of Bolingbroke. Its entire length had a "completed hard surface".[1][2] Between 1957 and 1960, Interstate 75 (I-75) and SR 401 were built on a northeastern bypass of Forsyth. The southern terminus of this bypass connected with the western terminus of SR 148.[7][14] Between 1960 and 1963, I-75 (and possibly SR 401) was extended southeast to just northeast of Bolingbroke, replacing SR 148 northwest of this point.[14][18] Between 1963 and the end of 1966, I-75 was extended southeast through the Macon area, replacing SR 148 from northeast of Bolingbroke to east of this community (between the I-475 interchange northwest of Bolingbroke and SR 19 Spur east of the community, I-75 was under construction). The remainder of SR 148 was redesignated as part of SR 19 Spur.[18][34]

State Route 154 (1940–1946) edit

 

State Route 154

LocationPickensDawson counties
Existed1939[74][75]–1946[5][6]

State Route 154 (SR 154) was a state highway in the north-central part of the state. It was established in late 1939 from an intersection with SR 156 in Blaine to SR 5 in Talking Rock.[74][75] The next year, it was under construction.[28][29] Before the year ended, it was established on an eastern alignment from SR 108 northeast of Jasper to SR 183 northwest of Dawsonville.[29][64] Around the middle of 1941, this new segment was under construction.[39][30] In 1942, the original segment had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[31][45] By the end of 1946, both segments of SR 154 were redesignated as parts of SR 136.[5][6] SR 154 was reused for a former section of SR 41 that same day.

State Route 158 (1940–1941) edit

 

State Route 158

LocationTunnel HillVarnell
Existed1940[74][75]–1941[30][31]

State Route 158 (SR 158) was a state highway in the northwestern part of the state. In 1940, SR 158 was established from US 41/SR 3 in Tunnel Hill to SR 71 in Varnell.[75][28] At the end of the next year, it was renumbered SR 201, because there was already another SR 158 elsewhere in the state.[30][31]

State Route 160 (1939–1995) edit

 

State Route 160

LocationClaytonDeKalb counties
Length5.7 mi[citation needed] (9.2 km)
Existed1939[27][73]–1995[84][85]

State Route 160 (SR 160) was a state highway in northern Clayton and southwestern DeKalb counties. SR 160 was established from SR 54 in Forest Park to SR 42 south-southeast of Constitution.[27][73] By the end of 1949, it was extended south-southeast on SR 54 and then west-northwest to US 19/US 41/SR 3.[17][12] In 1995, the western segment was decommissioned completely, while the eastern segment was redesignated as SR 54 Conn.[84][85]

State Route 160 (1940–1941) edit

 

State Route 160

LocationTreutlen County
Existed1940[75][28]–1941[30][31]

State Route 160 (SR 160) was a state highway in the central part of the state. In 1940, SR 160 was established from SR 78 south of Adrian to SR 46 west of Oak Park.[75][28] Later that year, SR 160's segment from south of Adrian to SR 56 northeast of Soperton had a "completed hard surface". The eastern part of the highway was under construction.[28][29] By the end of 1941, all of SR 160 was renumbered SR 86, with the portion from northeast of Soperton to west of Oak Park having a completed hard surface, as there was already another SR 160 elsewhere in the state.[30][31]

State Route 161 edit

 

State Route 161

LocationCedartownCave Spring
Existed1939[27][73]–1963[14][18]

State Route 161 (SR 161) was a state highway in central Polk County and southwestern Floyd counties. Its southern terminus was in Cedartown. It proceeded northwest to Cave Spring to an intersection with US 411/SR 53. It was established with a "completed hard surface" in 1939.[27][73] Between 1960 and 1963, it was redesignated as part of an extended SR 100.[14][18]

State Route 163 edit

 

State Route 163

LocationSouth of ShilohWoodbury
Existed1940[28][29]–1952[13][32]

State Route 163 (SR 163) was a state highway in the west-central part of the state. The highway that would eventually become SR 163 was established as SR 85 from south of Shiloh to SR 41 in Warm Springs.[11][50] By the middle of 1933, the entire highway had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[54][86] The next year, the segment of the highway just south-southwest of Warm Springs was shifted westward to a curve into the city.[58][59] At the end of 1936, two segments were under construction: around Shiloh and just west-southwest of Warm Springs.[72][87] By the middle of the year, a portion from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs was under construction.[81][24] Near the end of the year, the segment form south of Shiloh to Warm Springs had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[24][22] 1939 ended with the segment from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs having a completed hard surface.[74][75]

In 1940, SR 163 was built from Warm Springs to Woodbury.[28][29] By the middle of 1941, SR 163's segment just northeast of Warm Springs was under construction.[39][30] In 1942, a portion of SR 163 northeast of Warm Springs had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[31][45] By the end of 1946, SR 85 was shifted eastward to a more direct path between Columbus and Manchester. Its old path between south of Shiloh and Warm Springs was redesignated as a southerly extension of SR 163.[5][6]

By the middle of 1950, US 27 Alt. was designated on SR 163 from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs.[12][13] By 1952, SR 163 was redesignated as SR 85W.[13][32]

State Route 167 edit

 

State Route 167

LocationChatham, Effingham, Screven, Jenkins counties
Existed1940[75][28]–1955[1][2]

State Route 167 (SR 167) was a state highway that existed on a southeast-to-northwest path from the Savannah metropolitan area to Millen. In early 1940, the highway was established on a path from US 17/SR 25 southwest of Savannah and then north-northwest to US 280/SR 26 west-northwest of the city.[75][28] In 1942, US 280 was truncated to the west-northwest; its path through this area was redesignated as an east-southeast extension of US 80. SR 167 was extended west-northwest on US 80/SR 26 to just west-northwest of the ChathamEffingham county line and then on a solo path to the north-northwest to the Effingham–Screven county line. The original segment was indicated to be "on system–not marked or maintained". The entire concurrency with US 80/SR 26 and its solo trek from there to Guyton had a "completed hard surface".[31][45] The next year, SR 167 was extended northwest to Millen.[45][63] In 1944, a small portion of the highway north-northwest of Guyton had a completed hard surface.[63][5] By the end of 1948, the original segment was indicated to have "projected mileage". A small portion between Guyton and Egypt had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface. Another small portion northwest of that one had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[6][17] By 1952, the segment northwest of US 80/SR 26 was redesignated as a southeast extension of SR 17, with a portion southeast of Millen having completed grading, but not being surfaced.[13][32] By the middle of 1955, the original segment of SR 167 was decommissioned.[1][2]

State Route 170 edit

 

State Route 170

LocationDadeWalker counties
Existed1940[29][64]–1974[16][35]

State Route 170 (SR 170) was a state highway that was located in the northwestern part of the state, in Dade and Walker counties. At the end of 1940, it was established on a path from SR 157 south-southeast of Trenton east-south to a point just west of SR 193 southeast of the city.[29][64] About a year later, the entire length was under construction.[30][31] In 1945, the eastern terminus was shifted north-northwest to end at an intersection with SR 193 east-northeast of Trenton.[5][6] By the end of 1948, the eastern terminus of the highway was truncated to end at a point east of Trenton.[6][17] By the end of 1951, the eastern terminus was extended north-northeast and then northwest to end at another intersection with SR 157 west of Chattanooga Valley. This made the "eastern" terminus now the "northern" one. Most of this extension had a "sand clay, topsoil, or stabilized earth" surface. The northern part of it had completed grading, but was not surfaced. The portion east of the southern terminus was hard surfaced.[13][32] In 1953, the entire extension had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[33][25] By mid-1955, it had a sand clay, topsoil, or stabilized earth surface.[1][2] By the middle of 1957, this extension had a "topsoil or gravel, unpaved" surface.[2][7] Between 1960 and the end of 1963, the northern part of the extension was paved.[14][18] At the end of the decade, the entire length of SR 170 was hard surfaced.[66][46] In 1974, SR 157 was shifted eastward, replacing all of the north–south portion of SR 170, with the old alignment being redesignated as SR 189. The east–west portion of SR 170 was simply decommissioned.[16][35]

State Route 175 edit

 

State Route 175

LocationLowndesLanier counties
Existed1940[28][29]–1969[46][47]

State Route 175 (SR 175) was a state highway that existed in the south-central part of the state, in Lowndes and Lanier counties. In 1940, it was established from SR 122 and SR 125 in Barretts to US 84/SR 38 in Naylor.[28][29] By the end of 1948, a portion of the highway from east-southeast of Barretts (at the Lowndes–Lanier county line) to west-northwest of the SR 31 intersection northwest of Naylor had completed grading, but was not surfaced. From this point to the second crossing of the county line it had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[6][17] About five years later, the western terminus was truncated to a point west-northwest of the SR 31 intersection.[33][25] By the middle of 1955, it was further truncated to the intersection with US 221/SR 31.[1][2] By the end of 1963, the entire remaining segment of highway had a "topsoil or gravel, unpaved" surface.[14][18] In 1969, SR 175 was decommissioned.[46][47]

State Route 176 edit

 

State Route 176

LocationCobb County
Length15 mi[92] (24 km)
Existed1940[29][64]–2010[93][94]

State Route 176 (SR 176) was a state highway in the northwestern part of the state. In late 1940, it was established from SR 120 in Lost Mountain to SR 92 in New Hope.[29][64] In 1942, the highway was extended south-southeast to SR 6 in Powder Springs. The extension was indicated to be "on system–not marked or maintained".[31][45] The next year, the southern part of the extension had a "completed hard surface".[45][63] By the end of 1948, the entire length of the extension was hard surfaced. A portion of the original segment just west of Lost Mountain had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[6][17] By the middle of 1950, this portion was hard surfaced.[12][13] In 1953, a portion west of Lost Mountain had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[33][25] Two years later, the New Hope–Lost Mountain segment had a sand clay, topsoil, or stabilized earth surface.[1][2] By the middle of 1957, this segment was indicated to have a "topsoil or gravel, unpaved" surface.[2][7] Before the decade ended, the New Hope–Lost Mountain segment was paved. Also, an unnumbered road was built from Lost Mountain to US 41/SR 3 in Acworth.[7][14] In 1969, the New Hope-to-Lost Mountain segment was shifted to the northeast onto this unnumbered road. Its former alignment was redesignated as SR 92 Conn.[46][47] In 2010, SR 176 was decommissioned.[93][94]

This table shows the last alignment of the highway. The entire route was in Cobb County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
Powder Springs   US 278 / SR 6 – Hiram, Lithia SpringsSouthern terminus
Macland  SR 360 – Dallas, Marietta
Lost Mountain  SR 120 – Dallas, Marietta
Acworth   US 41 / SR 3 – Cartersville, KennesawNorthern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 179 edit

 

State Route 179

LocationCalvaryVada
Existed1940[29][64]–1987[19][20]

State Route 179 (SR 179) was a state highway that existed in the southwestern part of the state. It traversed Grady and Baker counties. At the end of 1940, SR 179 was established from SR 111 in Calvary to US 84/SR 38 in Whigham.[29][64] In 1942, it was extended north-northwest to just north of the Grady–Mitchell county line, and then west to SR 97 in Vada. The entire highway was indicated as being "on system–not marked or maintained".[31][45] By the end of 1949, SR 262 was established on the Grady–Mitchell county line, replacing the east–west part of SR 179.[17][12] By the middle of 1950, a portion north-northwest of Whigham was hard surfaced. Two small portions between Whigham and the Grady–Mitchell county line had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[12][13] By the end of 1951, the southern two thirds of this segment was hard surfaced. A portion south-southeast of Whigham had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[13][32] The next year, this portion near Whigham was hard surfaced.[32][25] By the middle of 1954, the entire Calvary–Whigham segment was hard surfaced. A portion south of the SR 262 intersection was shifted eastward and had a sand clay, topsoil, or stabilized earth surface.[25][1] About a year later, this portion was hard surfaced.[1][2] In 1987, SR 179 was decommissioned.[19][20]

State Route 179 Connector edit

 

State Route 179 Connector

LocationNear AmsterdamCalvary
Existed1969[46][47]–1987[19][20]

State Route 179 Connector (SR 179 Conn.) was a connector route of SR 179 that existed in the southwestern part of the state. In 1969, it was established between US 27/SR 1 east-southeast of Amsterdam to SR 111 and SR 179 in Calvary.[46][47] In 1987, SR 179 Conn. was decommissioned.[19][20]

State Route 181 (1940–1941) edit

 

State Route 181

LocationSocial Circle
Existed1940[29][64]–1941[30][31]

State Route 181 (SR 181) was a short-lived state highway that existed entirely in Walton County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 181 was built between 1921 and the end of 1926 as an unnumbered road from SR 11 in Social Circle to SR 12 southeast of the city. The entire length of this road had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[9][10] In 1930, this road was designated as the entire length of

list, former, state, routes, georgia, this, list, former, state, routes, state, georgia, this, list, represents, routes, that, traveled, through, state, longer, operation, have, been, decommissioned, have, been, renumbered, standard, state, highway, markerssta. This is a list of former state routes in the U S state of Georgia This list represents routes that traveled through the state but are no longer in operation have been decommissioned or have been renumbered Standard state highway markersStateGeorgia State Route XX SR XX System linksGeorgia State Highway System Interstate US State Special Contents 1 State Route 1E 2 State Route 3W Albany 1946 1957 3 State Route 3W Albany 1960 1973 4 State Route 3W Thomaston 5 State Route 3E Thomaston 6 State Route 3N 7 State Route 3S Thomaston 8 State Route 3W Atlanta Marietta 1937 1946 9 State Route 3W Atlanta Marietta 1954 1955 10 State Route 3E Atlanta Marietta 11 State Route 3S Marietta 12 State Route 4 1919 1929 13 State Route 7W 14 State Route 7E 15 State Route 9E 16 State Route 11E 17 State Route 13W 18 State Route 15W 19 State Route 16S 20 State Route 20 1919 1921 21 State Route 20 1921 1929 22 State Route 26E 23 State Route 27S 24 State Route 28 1919 1937 25 State Route 34 1919 1926 26 State Route 36 1919 1941 27 State Route 42A 28 State Route 43 1919 1941 29 State Route 44 1919 1921 30 State Route 45 1919 1926 31 State Route 46 1919 1921 32 State Route 50N 33 State Route 50S 34 State Route 51 1919 1921 35 State Route 52 1921 1937 36 State Route 54B 37 State Route 56 Spur 38 State Route 60 1921 1926 39 State Route 60 1930 1940 40 State Route 62 1926 1929 41 State Route 63 1921 1967 41 1 State Route 63 Spur 42 State Route 63 1968 1986 43 State Route 65 1921 1926 44 State Route 68 1921 1932 45 State Route 69 46 State Route 70 1932 1941 47 State Route 72 1930 1941 48 State Route 73W 49 State Route 73E 50 State Route 85W 51 State Route 85E 52 State Route 86 1930 1940 53 State Route 91W 54 State Route 105 1932 1937 55 State Route 131 56 State Route 134 57 State Route 143 57 1 State Route 143 Connector 58 State Route 148 1939 1949 59 State Route 148 1955 1966 60 State Route 154 1940 1946 61 State Route 158 1940 1941 62 State Route 160 1939 1995 63 State Route 160 1940 1941 64 State Route 161 65 State Route 163 66 State Route 167 67 State Route 170 68 State Route 175 69 State Route 176 70 State Route 179 70 1 State Route 179 Connector 71 State Route 181 1940 1941 72 See also 73 References 74 External linksState Route 1E edit nbsp State Route 1ELocationFloyd County RomeExisted1955 1 2 1985 3 4 State Route 1E SR 1E was a route in Floyd County extending along present day Old Cedartown Road Park Avenue Maple Avenue East Sixth Street and 2nd Avenue from US 27 SR 1 to US 27 SR 1 as well as US 411 SR 53 Originally part of US 27 SR 1 it was originally designated as SR 1 before being reassigned as SR 1E in 1955 1 2 US 27 SR 1 had been relocated along former SR 1 Spur which is present day US 27 SR 1 from Old Cedartown Road to present day US 411 in 1938 with the old route remaining as SR 1 through Lindale When US 27 was upgraded and relocated in 1968 to the Rome Connector SR 1E was truncated to end at the present day interchange of Maple Avenue Essentially a business route for an unincorporated community south of Rome the state no longer saw the value in retaining an old alignment and transferred control to Floyd County in 1985 3 4 State Route 3W Albany 1946 1957 edit nbsp State Route 3WLocationAlbanyExisted1946 5 6 1960 2 7 State Route 3W SR 3W was a state highway in the city of Albany It traversed portions of Dougherty and Lee counties At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path as it currently does in the Albany metropolitan area 8 By the end of 1926 the segment of the highway from the Mitchell Dougherty county line to Albany had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 US 19 was designated on this stretch of SR 3 10 11 By the end of 1946 SR 3W was projected to be designated from the western part of Albany to US 19 SR 3 north of the city 5 6 By the middle of 1950 the entire length of SR 3W was hard surfaced 12 13 By July 1957 SR 3 in the northern part of Albany was redesignated as SR 3 Conn due to SR 3W being redesignated as part of SR 3 2 7 State Route 3W Albany 1960 1973 edit nbsp State Route 3WLocationAlbanyExisted1960 7 14 1973 15 16 State Route 3W SR 3W was a state highway that existed in the city of Albany It traversed portions of Dougherty and Lee counties At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 the segment from the Mitchell Dougherty county line to Albany had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 US 19 was designated on it through the Albany metropolitan area 10 11 By the end of 1946 SR 3W was projected to be designated from the western part of Albany to US 19 SR 3 north of the city 5 6 By April 1949 the southern part of SR 3W was hard surfaced while its northern part had completed grading but was not surfaced 17 12 By the middle of 1950 the entire length of SR 3W was hard surfaced 12 13 By July 1957 SR 3 in the northern part of Albany was redesignated as SR 3 Conn due to SR 3W being redesignated as part of SR 3 2 7 By June 1960 SR 3 Conn was redesignated as part of the SR 3 mainline and its old path was redesignated as the second SR 3W in the city 7 14 In 1973 SR 3W was redesignated as part of SR 3 while its former path was redesignated as part of SR 133 15 16 State Route 3W Thomaston edit nbsp State Route 3WLocationThomastonExisted1963 14 18 1987 19 20 State Route 3W SR 3W was a state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston in Upson County At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 US 19 was designated on this segment 10 11 By June 1963 the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on 14 18 In 1987 SR 3W was redesignated as SR 3S 19 20 State Route 3E Thomaston edit nbsp State Route 3ELocationThomastonExisted1963 14 18 1987 19 20 State Route 3E SR 3E was a state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston in Upson County At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 US 19 was designated on this segment 10 11 By June 1963 the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on 14 18 In 1987 SR 3E was redesignated as SR 3N 19 20 State Route 3N edit nbsp State Route 3NLocationThomastonExisted1987 19 20 1988 20 21 State Route 3N SR 3N was a short lived state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston in Upson County At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 US 19 was designated on this segment 10 11 By June 1963 the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on 14 18 In 1987 SR 3E was redesignated as SR 3N 19 20 In 1988 SR 3N in Thomaston was redesignated as the northbound lanes of SR 3 20 21 State Route 3S Thomaston edit nbsp State Route 3SLocationThomastonExisted1987 19 20 1988 20 21 State Route 3S SR 3S was a short lived state highway that existed in the city of Thomaston in Upson County At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through the city as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 the segment of SR 3 through Thomaston had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 US 19 was designated on this segment 10 11 By June 1963 the path of SR 3 in Thomaston was split into SR 3W and SR 3E It was unclear as to which highway US 19 traveled on 14 18 In 1987 SR 3W was redesignated as SR 3S 19 20 In 1988 SR 3S in Thomaston was redesignated as the southbound lanes of SR 3 20 21 State Route 3W Atlanta Marietta 1937 1946 edit nbsp State Route 3WLocationAtlanta MariettaExisted1937 22 23 1946 5 6 State Route 3W SR 3W was a state highway that existed in Atlanta and Marietta It traversed portions of Fulton and Cobb counties At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through this area as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 US 41 had been designated on this segment of the highway The Atlanta Marietta segment had a completed hard surface 9 10 Late in 1937 SR 3 was split into two parts between Atlanta and the northwest part of Marietta US 41 SR 3 traveled northwest on the original path while SR 3E traveled north northwest on a more eastern path between the two cities 24 22 By the end of the year SR 3W was established traveling northwest with US 41 on Marietta Street and Old Marietta Road 22 23 By the end of 1946 SR 3W was redesignated as part of the SR 3 mainline 5 6 State Route 3W Atlanta Marietta 1954 1955 edit nbsp State Route 3WLocationAtlanta MariettaExisted1954 25 1 1955 1 2 State Route 3W SR 3W was a short lived state highway that existed in Atlanta and Marietta It traversed portions of Fulton and Cobb counties At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through these cities as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 US 41 had been designated on this segment of SR 3 It had a completed hard surface 9 10 Late in 1937 SR 3 was split into two parts between Atlanta and the northwest part of Marietta US 41 SR 3 traveled northwest on the original path while SR 3E traveled north northwest on a more eastern path between the two cities 24 22 By the end of the year SR 3W was established traveling northwest with US 41 on Marietta Street and Old Marietta Road while SR 3E traveled north northwest on Hemphill Street and Northside Drive 22 23 By the end of 1946 SR 3W was redesignated as part of the SR 3 mainline 5 6 By June 1954 the second SR 3W in this area was designated between the two cities 25 1 By June 1955 it was redesignated as part of SR 3 1 2 State Route 3E Atlanta Marietta edit nbsp State Route 3ELocationAtlanta MariettaExisted1937 24 22 1985 26 4 State Route 3E SR 3E was a state highway that existed in Atlanta and Marietta It traversed portions of Fulton and Cobb counties At least as early as 1919 SR 3 traveled on essentially the same path through these two cities as it currently does 8 By the end of 1926 US 41 had been designated on this entire segment of SR 3 which had a completed hard surface 9 10 Late in 1937 SR 3 was split into two parts between Atlanta and the northwest part of Marietta US 41 SR 3 traveled northwest on the original path while SR 3E traveled north northwest on a more eastern path between the two cities SR 3E s path from SR 120 in the east part of Marietta to US 41 SR 3 in the northwestern part of the city The rest of SR 3E was under construction 24 22 By the end of the year SR 3W was established traveling northwest with US 41 on Marietta Street and Old Marietta Road while SR 3E traveled north northwest on Hemphill Street and Northside Drive All of SR 3E in the northern part of Atlanta was hard surfaced From the north part of the city to the northwest part the highway had completed grading but was not surfaced 22 23 Later that year all of SR 3E from Atlanta to northwest of the Fulton Cobb county line had a completed hard surface 23 27 In 1940 nearly the entire segment of SR 3E in Marietta had a completed hard surface It was under construction from northwest of the Fulton Cobb county line to the eastern part of Marietta 28 29 By the end of the next year the entire length of SR 3E had a completed hard surface 30 31 By February 1948 SR 3E was moved off of Hemphill Avenue It along with US 41 Temp followed US 19 on Spring Street then traveled west on 14th Street and resumed the Northside Drive path 6 17 By April 1949 US 41 Temp SR 3E s southbound lanes traveled on Hemphill Avenue 17 12 By the middle of 1950 US 41 Temp SR 3E was shifted off of US 19 on Spring Street and 14th Street and traveled on Hemphill Avenue again 12 13 In 1952 US 41 Temp was redesignated as part of the US 41 mainline 32 33 In 1985 SR 3E was decommissioned 26 4 State Route 3S Marietta editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2017 nbsp State Route 3SLocationMariettaExisted1965 18 34 1980 16 35 36 37 State Route 3S SR 3S was a state highway that existed in the city limits of Marietta in Cobb County Georgia By the end of 1965 it was designated from SR 3 to SR 5 18 34 Between 1974 16 35 and March 1980 SR 3S was redesignated as SR 3 Spur 36 37 State Route 4 1919 1929 edit nbsp State Route 4LocationAlabama CartersvilleExisted1919 8 1929 10 11 State Route 4 SR 4 was a state highway that was formed at least as early as 1919 8 It began at the Alabama state line traveled to the east southeast and intersected SR 1 in Rome It then curved to the southeast and reached its eastern terminus an intersection with SR 3 in Cartersvile By the end of 1921 SR 4 was extended southeast into the main part of Cartersville on a concurrency with SR 3 and headed north northeast to an intersection with SR 2 SR 53 in Fairmount 8 9 By the end of 1926 almost all of the Alabama Rome segment and the southern half of the 1921 extension had a sand clay or top soil surface In the vicinity of Rome the highway had a completed hard surface About half of the Rome Cartersville segment was under construction The easternmost part of this segment and nearly the entire SR 3 concurrency had a completed semi hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 the entire length of the original segment of SR 4 was redesignated as SR 20 with US 41W designated along the Rome Cartersville segment US 41 was designated along the former SR 3 concurrency The 1921 extension was redesignated as SR 61 10 11 SR 4 was reused on that same day as a redesignation of parts of SR 15 SR 17 and SR 24 State Route 7W edit nbsp State Route 7WLocationCrisp CountyExisted1963 14 18 1985 3 4 State Route 7W SR 7W was a state highway that existed in the south central part of the state Between June 1960 and June 1963 the path of SR 7 through the Cordele area was split into SR 7W and SR 7E SR 7W traveled through the western part of the city 14 18 In 1985 it was decommissioned 3 4 The entire route was in Crisp County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 41 SR 7 south SR 7E northSouthern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E northern terminus of southern segment of SR 7 Cordele nbsp nbsp US 280 SR 30 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 41 SR 7 north SR 7E southNorthern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E southern terminus of northern segment of SR 7 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 7E edit nbsp State Route 7ELocationCrisp CountyExisted1963 14 18 1985 3 4 State Route 7E SR 7E was a state highway that existed in the south central part of the state Between June 1960 and June 1963 the path of SR 7 through the Cordele area was split into SR 7W and SR 7E SR 7E traveled through the main part of the city concurrent with US 41 14 18 In 1985 it was redesignated as part of the SR 7 mainline 3 4 The entire route was in Crisp County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 41 SR 7 south SR 7W northSouthern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E northern terminus of southern segment of SR 7 Cordele nbsp nbsp US 280 SR 30 nbsp nbsp SR 257 northSouthern terminus of SR 257 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 41 SR 7 north SR 7E southNorthern terminus of SR 7W and SR 7E southern terminus of northern segment of SR 7 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 9E edit nbsp State Route 9ELocationForsyth Dawson and Lumpkin countiesLength21 319 mi 38 34 310 km Existed1941 39 30 1981 40 41 State Route 9E SR 9E was a 21 319 mile long 34 310 km state highway It was originally constructed early in 1941 39 30 In July 1981 as the extension of SR 400 had reached SR 60 south southeast of Dahlonega this designation was decommissioned 40 41 The routing that was followed by SR 9E starts where Hopewell Road splits from the current SR 9 north northeast of Coal Mountain in Forsyth County and parallels SR 400 very closely The road changes names to Lumpkin Campground Road as it enters Dawson County passes by the North Georgia Premium Outlet Mall then crosses SR 53 and SR 400 in rapid succession Just before intersecting with SR 136 the road changes names again to Harmony Church Road then is called Auraria Road as it becomes SR 136 The road crosses SR 400 once more to its west parts ways with SR 136 then travels north through the community of Auraria into Lumpkin County to its northern terminus at SR 9 SR 52 west of Dahlonega 38 42 State Route 11E edit nbsp State Route 11ELocationBibb CountyExisted1953 33 25 1963 14 18 State Route 11E SR 11E was a state highway that existed entirely within Bibb County in the Macon metropolitan area It functioned like an eastern alternate route of US 41 SR 11 SR 49 In 1953 it was established from US 41 SR 11 SR 49 SR 247 south southwest of Macon to US 41 SR 11 SR 49 in the city 33 25 Between June 1960 and June 1963 SR 49 was shifted eastward off of US 41 SR 11 and replacing SR 11E 14 18 State Route 13W edit nbsp State Route 13WLocationFulton and DeKalb countiesExisted1946 5 6 1971 43 44 State Route 13W SR 13W was a state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area Between the beginning of 1945 and November 1946 it was established from US 19 SR 9 north of Atlanta to the southwestern corner of North Atlanta 5 6 Between February 1948 and April 1949 its northern terminus was extended to US 23 SR 13 east northeast of North Atlanta 17 12 In 1971 SR 13W was redesignated as part of SR 141 Peachtree Road Peachtree Industrial Boulevard and SR 13 Conn 43 44 CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes FultonBuckhead nbsp nbsp US 19 SR 9 Peachtree Road Southern terminus nbsp SR 237 Piedmont Road DeKalbDoraville nbsp nbsp SR 141 northSouthern terminus of SR 141 nbsp nbsp US 23 SR 13 Buford Highway Northern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 15W edit nbsp State Route 15WLocationAthensExisted1946 5 6 1949 17 12 State Route 15W SR 15W was a short lived state highway that existed completely within the city limits of Athens It functioned like a bypass of downtown Between the beginning of 1945 and November 1946 it was established from US 129 US 441 SR 15 SR 24 north northwest to US 129 SR 15 5 6 Between February 1948 and April 1949 the path of SR 15 was shifted westward replacing SR 15W 17 12 failed verification The entire route was in Athens Clarke County mikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 129 US 441 SR 15 SR 24Southern terminus nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 29 US 78 SR 8 SR 10 nbsp nbsp US 129 SR 15Northern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 16S edit nbsp State Route 16SLocationJefferson Glascock and Warren countiesExisted1942 31 45 1952 32 33 State Route 16S SR 16S was a state highway that existed in portions of Jefferson Glascock and Warren counties In 1942 it was established from an intersection with SR 16 west northwest of Wrens to another intersection with SR 16 southeast of Warrenton 31 45 A decade later the path of SR 16 southeast of Warrenton was shifted southward replacing the path of SR 16S The portion from southeast of Warrenton to northwest of Wrens was redesignated as SR 16 Conn while the portion from northwest of Wrens to north of Louisville was redesignated as SR 16 Conn 32 33 CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes Jefferson nbsp SR 16Southern terminus Glascock No major junctions Warren nbsp SR 16Northern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 20 1919 1921 edit nbsp State Route 20LocationGray SpartaExisted1919 8 1921 8 9 State Route 20 SR 20 was a very short lived state highway that traveled from Gray to Sparta It was formed at least as early as 1919 8 and was decommissioned in 1921 and redesignated SR 22 8 9 It began at an intersection with SR 11 in Gray It traveled to the east northeast and entered Milledgeville where it intersected SR 24 and SR 29 It then went northeast to Sparta where it met its eastern terminus an intersection with SR 15 and SR 16 SR 20 was reused that same year on a different road see below State Route 20 1921 1929 edit nbsp State Route 20LocationLouisville WaynesboroExisted1921 8 9 1929 10 11 State Route 20 SR 20 was a state highway in the east central part of the state At least as early as 1919 part of SR 24 was established from Louisville to Waynesboro 8 By the end of September 1921 the path of SR 24 from Waynesboro to Louisville was shifted northwestward The former path of SR 24 was redesignated as SR 20 8 9 Between October 1926 and October 1929 the path of SR 24 from Augusta to Louisville was reverted to the Waynesboro Louisville path replacing SR 20 SR 24 s former path on US 1 was redesignated as part of SR 4 10 11 SR 20 was reused on that same day as a redesignation of most of the original SR 4 CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes JeffersonLouisville nbsp nbsp nbsp US 1 SR 17 SR 24Western terminus Burke nbsp nbsp SR 56 southNorthern terminus of SR 56 Waynesboro nbsp SR 21Eastern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 26E edit nbsp State Route 26ELocationTybee IslandExisted1969 46 47 1985 3 4 State Route 26E SR 26E was a state highway that existed in the eastern part of Chatham County in Savannah Beach which is what Tybee Island was known as at the time The roadway that would eventually become SR 26E was established between June 1963 and the end of 1965 as SR 26 Loop between two intersections with US 80 SR 26 in the southern part of the city 18 34 In 1969 it was redesignated as SR 26E 46 47 In 1985 SR 26E was decommissioned 3 4 The entire route was in Savannah Beach Chatham County mikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp US 80 SR 26Western terminus nbsp nbsp US 80 SR 26Eastern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 27S edit nbsp State Route 27SLocationDodge CountyExisted1965 18 34 1977 48 49 State Route 27S SR 27S was a state highway that existed in the central part of Dodge County southwest of Eastman Between June 1963 and the end of 1965 it was established from US 341 SR 27 west of Eastman to US 23 US 341 SR 27 southeast of the city 18 34 In 1977 it became the new route of US 341 SR 27 48 49 The entire route was in Dodge County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp US 341 SR 27Western terminus nbsp nbsp nbsp US 23 US 341 SR 27Eastern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 28 1919 1937 edit nbsp State Route 28LocationGeorgetown ViennaExisted1919 8 1937 22 23 State Route 28 SR 28 was a state highway that traveled from Georgetown to Vienna It was established at least as early as 1919 8 and was decommissioned in 1937 22 23 It began at an intersection with SR 39 in Georgetown It traveled to the northeast and intersected SR 1 in Lumpkin It curved to the east southeast through Preston In Americus the highway intersected SR 3 and SR 26 It headed to the east and entered Vienna where it met its eastern terminus an intersection with SR 7 By the end of 1926 a segment just east of Preston was under construction The eastern half of the Preston Americus segment had a completed hard surface The Dooly County portion of the highway had a sand clay or topsoil surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 a segment just east of Lumpkin and a segment just west of Preston had a sand clay or topsoil surface 10 11 By the middle of 1930 SR 28 was extended northeast from Vienna to Hawkinsville 11 50 A few months later the Richland Preston segment was under construction 50 51 By 1932 US 280 was designated on the Richland Americus segment 51 52 Near the end of the year the entire Vienna Hawkinsville segment had a sand clay or topsoil surface 53 54 By the end of 1937 s segment just southwest of Hawkinsville had a completed hard surface 24 22 Just a few months later all of SR 28 had been redesignated as SR 27 22 23 This was done so that SR 28 could be reused on former SR 52 and SR 105 to match South Carolina State Route 34 1919 1926 edit nbsp State Route 34LocationCarrollton Villa RicaExisted1919 8 1926 9 10 State Route 34 SR 34 was a short lived state highway in the western part of the state It was established at least as early as 1919 8 and was decommissioned in 1926 9 10 When it was established it extended from SR 1 and SR 16 in Carrollton to SR 8 in Villa Rica In 1926 its entire length consisted of a sand clay or top soil surface and was redesignated as a southern branch of SR 8 9 10 Within three years US 78S had been designated along the path of SR 8 s southern branch 10 11 A decade later US 78S had been redesignated as US 78 Alt 23 27 Nearly another decade later SR 8 had been redesignated as SR 8 Alt 6 17 By the beginning of 1953 US 78 Alt had been decommissioned 32 33 By the middle of 1954 SR 8 Alt had been redesignated as SR 166 from Carrollton to northeast of the city and SR 61 from that point to Villa Rica as they travel today 25 1 SR 34 was reused in 1930 along part of its current route State Route 36 1919 1941 edit nbsp State Route 36LocationCommerce South Carolina state line east southeast of ElbertonExisted1919 8 1941 30 31 State Route 36 SR 36 was a state highway that originally existed from Danielsville to Elberton when it was established at least as early as 1919 8 By the middle of 1930 its western terminus was shifted southwestward into Athens 11 50 By the end of the year the western terminus had been reverted to Danielsville and extended northwest to Commerce The Athens Comer segment was redesignated as SR 82 50 51 In 1941 SR 82 west of Comer and the Comer South Carolina segment of SR 36 had been redesignated as SR 72 while the Commerce Comer segment of SR 36 had been redesignated as an extension of SR 98 That same day the old SR 72 was redesignated as SR 36 30 31 State Route 42A edit nbsp State Route 42ALocationAtlantaExisted1941 30 31 1946 5 6 State Route 42A SR 42A was a state highway in Atlanta It was entirely concurrent with US 29 US 78 SR 8 SR 10 SR 12 Ponce de Leon Avenue It was formed in 1941 30 31 and decommissioned only five years later in 1946 5 6 It began at an intersection with US 19 SR 9 in the northern part of the city From there US 29 US 78 SR 8 SR 10 SR 12 SR 42A traveled to the east to an intersection with SR 42 Here SR 42A ended and US 29 US 78 SR 8 SR 10 SR 12 continued to the east State Route 43 1919 1941 edit nbsp State Route 43LocationAtlantaExisted1919 8 1941 30 31 State Route 43 SR 43 was a state highway that originally existed from a point north northwest of Gainesville north northeast to Cleveland and then northwest to Turners Corner when it was established at least as early as 1919 8 Its original southern terminus was at SR 11 north northwest of Gainesville and its original northern terminus was at SR 9 in Turners Corner 8 By the end of 1921 SR 11 and SR 43 were swapped in this area SR 11 took over the entire route of SR 43 while SR 43 was shifted to travel from a point north northeast of Gainesville northwest to SR 9 just northeast of Dahlonega 8 9 By the end of 1926 the southern part of the new path had a sand clay or top soil surface and the rest of it had a completed semi hard surface 9 10 By the end of 1929 the Lumpkin County portion of the highway had a completed hard surface 10 11 By the middle of the next year all of the highway was completed 11 50 In 1941 SR 43 was redesignated as SR 52 30 31 Note that SR 43 was reused on former SR 70 to match South Carolina that same day State Route 44 1919 1921 edit nbsp State Route 44LocationAlabama state line northwest of Jakin BrinsonExisted1919 8 1921 8 9 State Route 44 SR 44 was a short lived state highway that only existed from the Alabama state line northwest of Jakin to Brinson It was established at least as early as 1919 8 and was decommissioned by the end of 1921 8 9 It was redesignated as part of SR 38 8 9 SR 44 was reused in 1921 along part of its current route State Route 45 1919 1926 edit nbsp State Route 45LocationAvondale Estates west southwest of AthensExisted1919 8 1926 9 10 State Route 45 SR 45 was a short lived state highway in the north central part of the state It was established at least as early as 1919 on a path from SR 8 and SR 13 in Lawrenceville south southeast to Loganville east southeast to SR 11 in Monroe and east northeast to SR 15 in Watkinsville 8 By the end of 1921 the Lawrenceville Loganville segment was redesignated as a southern extension of SR 13 the western terminus was extended west southwest to what was known as Ingleside now known as Avondale Estates and the eastern terminus was shifted to the northwest to end at SR 8 west southwest of Athens 8 9 By the end of 1926 the segment from Ingleside now labeled as Avondale to Loganville and the segment from Monroe to the Athens area were redesignated as US 78 SR 10 while the Loganville Monroe segment was also redesignated as US 78 and SR 13 and possibly SR 10 9 10 SR 45 was reused in 1930 along part of its current route State Route 46 1919 1921 edit nbsp State Route 46LocationSylvester TiftonExisted1919 8 1921 8 9 State Route 46 SR 46 was a short lived state highway that started at SR 32 and SR 33 in Sylvester to SR 7 and SR 35 in Tifton It was established at least as early as 1919 8 By the end of 1921 the entire highway was redesignated as part of SR 50 8 9 SR 46 was reused in 1921 along part of its current route State Route 50N edit nbsp State Route 50NLocationAlbanyExisted1963 14 18 1973 15 16 State Route 50N SR 50N was a state highway that existed in the city limits of Albany within Dougherty County The roadway that would eventually become SR 50N was established at least as early as 1919 as SR 32 from Dawson through Albany and into Sylvester 8 By the end of 1921 SR 50 was designated across the state This truncated SR 32 at Ashburn 8 9 By the end of 1926 the portion of SR 50 in the eastern part of Albany had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the middle of 1930 from west of Albany to the Worth Tift county line the highway had a completed hard surface The western half of the Dougherty County portion of the Dawson Albany segment had a completed semi hard surface 11 50 In January 1932 the Dawson Albany segment had a completed hard surface 52 55 Between February 1948 and April 1949 US 82 was designated on SR 50 through the Albany area 17 12 Between June 1960 and June 1963 the path of SR amp 50 through Albany was split into SR 50N and SR 50S SR 50N used Broad Avenue and Sylvester Road while US 82 SR 50S used Oglethorpe Avenue and Albany Expressway 14 18 In 1973 SR 50N was redesignated as SR 50 Conn while SR 50S was redesignated as the SR 50 mainline 15 16 State Route 50S edit nbsp State Route 50SLocationAlbanyExisted1963 14 18 1973 15 16 State Route 50S SR 50S was a state highway that existed in the city limits of Albany within Dougherty County The roadway that would eventually become SR 50S was established at least as early as 1919 as SR 32 from Dawson through Albany and into Sylvester 8 By the end of 1921 SR 50 was designated across the state This truncated SR 32 at Ashburn 8 9 By the end of 1926 the portion of SR 50 in the eastern part of Albany had a completed hard surface 9 10 By the middle of 1930 from west of Albany to the Worth Tift county line the highway had a completed hard surface The western half of the Dougherty County portion of the Dawson Albany segment had a completed semi hard surface 11 50 In January 1932 the Dawson Albany segment had a completed hard surface 52 55 Between February 1948 and April 1949 US 82 was designated on SR 50 through the Albany area 17 12 Between June 1960 and June 1963 the path of SR amp 50 through Albany was split into SR 50N and SR 50S SR 50N used Broad Avenue and Sylvester Road while US 82 SR 50S used Oglethorpe Avenue and Albany Expressway 14 18 In 1973 SR 50N was redesignated as SR 50 Conn while SR 50S was redesignated as the SR 50 mainline 15 16 State Route 51 1919 1921 edit nbsp State Route 51LocationAlbanyExisted1919 8 1921 8 9 State Route 51 SR 51 was a state highway in Fannin County Between 1919 and 1920 SR 51 was designated from Blue Ridge to the Tennessee state line 8 By the end of 1921 the entire highway was redesignated as part of SR 5 8 9 Note that the SR 51 number was reused in 1921 along part of the current highway State Route 52 1921 1937 edit nbsp State Route 52LocationColumbia Richmond countiesExisted1921 8 9 1937 22 23 State Route 52 SR 52 was a state highway in Columbia and Richmond counties in the Augusta metropolitan area Between 1919 and 1921 SR 52 was designated from the South Carolina state line northwest of Augusta and the South Carolina state line again on the northeastern edge of the city 8 9 Before 1926 ended the entire length of SR 52 had a sand clay or top soil surface 9 10 By the middle of 1930 in an area northwest of Augusta SR 52 was shifted to a more western alignment This segment was located about half of the distance from the Columbia Richmond county line and the original segment The original part northwest of the split did not have a highway number The highway had a completed hard surface from there to Augusta 11 50 The year ended with all of SR 52 having a completed hard surface The original part s Richmond County portion did too 50 51 By February 1932 the entire length of the highway had a completed hard surface 52 55 Near the end of the year the northwestern part of SR 52 was shifted back to its original alignment and re signed as SR 52 The western extended part was re designated as SR 104 56 57 Before 1938 all of SR 52 was redesignated as the southern segment of SR 28 22 23 State Route 54B edit nbsp State Route 54BLocationSharpsburg FayettevilleExisted1921 8 9 1934 58 59 State Route 54B SR 54B was a state highway just south of Atlanta When it was established in between 1919 and 1921 it extended from an intersection with SR 16 in Sharpsburg northeast to an intersection with SR 54 in Fayetteville 8 9 By the end of 1926 the northern half had a sand clay or top soil surface 9 10 Nearly a decade later the entire length of SR 54B was redesignated as a re routing of the SR 54 mainline 58 59 State Route 56 Spur editFurther information Georgia State Route 56 Augusta spur route and Transportation in Augusta Georgia Doug Barnard Parkway nbsp State Route 56 SpurLocationAugustaLength6 6 mi 60 10 6 km Existed2014 61 62 State Route 56 Spur SR 56 Spur was a 6 6 mile long 10 6 km spur route that existed entirely within the southeastern part of Richmond County Its route was entirely within the city limits of Augusta Its west east section was part of Tobacco Road It was known as Doug Barnard Parkway for the rest of its length Its entire length was within the city limits of Augusta Its southern terminus was at an intersection with the SR 56 mainline Mike Padgett Highway Its northern terminus was at an intersection with US 1 US 25 US 78 US 278 SR 10 SR 121 Gordon Highway in downtown Augusta Here the roadway continues as Molly Pond Road 60 The highway was decommissioned in 2014 61 62 State Route 60 1921 1926 edit nbsp State Route 60LocationSterlingExisted1921 8 9 1926 9 10 State Route 60 SR 60 was a short lived state highway in the southeastern part of the state When it was established between 1919 and 1921 it extended from SR 27 in Sterling northeast to an intersection with SR 25 south southwest of Darien 8 9 By the end of 1926 the highway was removed from the state highway system 9 10 This short segment of highway would later be used as part of SR 131 in 1939 in which this section became part of SR 99 and SR 131 was shifted further north 45 63 State Route 60 1930 1940 edit nbsp State Route 60LocationSocial CircleExisted1930 50 51 1940 29 64 State Route 60 SR 60 was a very short state highway that existed entirely within Walton County The roadway that would eventually become SR 60 was built between 1921 and the end of 1926 as an unnumbered road from SR 11 in Social Circle to SR 12 southeast of the city The entire length of the highway had a sand clay or top soil surface 9 10 In 1930 this road was designated as SR 60 50 51 At the end of 1940 SR 60 was redesignated as SR 181 29 64 It later became SR 213 one year later This portion became part of SR 229 which along with SR 213 was decommissioned in the 1980s SR 60 was reused as a renumbering of former SR 86 and SR 86 was reused to renumber the duplicate SR 160 State Route 62 1926 1929 edit nbsp State Route 62LocationTalmo HomerExisted1926 9 10 1929 10 11 State Route 62 SR 62 was a short lived state highway in the northeastern part of the state It was proposed between 1919 and 1921 on a path from SR 11 at a point northwest of Jefferson at approximately the location of Talmo northeast to SR 15 in Homer 8 9 By the end of 1926 SR 62 was established on this same path with US 129 having been applied onto SR 11 9 10 Within three years this short highway had been decommissioned 10 11 State Route 63 1921 1967 edit nbsp State Route 63LocationFancy Hall PembrokeExisted1921 8 9 1967 65 66 State Route 63 SR 63 was a state highway that existed in the east central part of the state When it was established between 1919 and 1921 it only extended from SR 30 in Ellabell to SR 26 at a point that approximates today s location of Eden 8 9 By the end of 1926 its termini were shifted to SR 30 in Lanier to US 80 SR 26 in Blitchton 9 10 By the end of 1929 the highway s western portion had a sand clay or top soil surface while its eastern portion was under construction Also the western terminus was shifted again to Pembroke 10 11 The next year the eastern portion had a sand clay or top soil surface 11 50 At the end of the year US 280 was designated along the entire path of SR 63 51 52 Before 1934 ended the western portion had completed grading but was not surfaced 58 59 Just a few months later the eastern portion of SR 63 was under the same condition 67 68 About six months later the eastern terminus area had a completed hard surface 69 70 Near the end of 1936 the rest of the highway also had a completed hard surface 71 72 About a year later SR 30 s length southeast of Pembroke was swapped with the entire length of SR 63 That meant that SR 63 easternmost terminus was now at US 17 SR 25 southeast of Clyde The portion of this new path just southeast of Pembroke as well as the entire segment southeast of Clyde was under construction 24 22 Within a year those under construction segments had completed grading but were not surfaced 23 27 By the middle of 1939 a small portion of the highway farther to the southeast of Pembroke had the same conditions 27 73 Before the year ended the rest of the highway s length also had the same conditions 74 75 A few months later most of the highway s length that today is within the boundaries of Fort Stewart was under construction 75 28 Later in 1940 the segment from US 17 SR 25 to SR 144 southeast of Clyde had a completed hard surface 29 64 About five years later Fort Stewart was established Most of the state highways that traveled within the area now covered by the base were removed Due to this SR 63 was split into two short segments one from the northern edge of the base to Pembroke and one from Richmond Hill to the southeastern edge of the base 5 6 By the end of 1948 state highways were re established through the base thereby reconnecting SR 63 as a single highway 6 17 One year later the eastern terminus of the highway was extended south southeast to Fancy Hall 12 13 Before 1953 ended the Keller Richmond Hill segment was hard surfaced 33 25 In 1954 the segment from the northern edge of Fort Stewart to Pembroke was hard surfaced 25 1 At the end of the decade the Fancy Hall Keller segment was paved 7 14 Before 1966 began SR 63 Spur had been established from SR 63 southeast of Richmond Hill east to Fort McAllister 18 34 In 1967 SR 67 s path south of Pembroke was shifted to the east taking over the entire path of SR 63 therefore SR 63 Spur was redesignated as SR 67 Spur 65 66 State Route 63 Spur edit nbsp State Route 63 SpurLocationSoutheast of Richmond Hill Fort McAllisterExisted1966 18 34 1967 65 66 State Route 63 Spur SR 63 Spur was a short lived spur route of SR 63 Before 1966 began SR 63 Spur was established from the SR 63 mainline southeast of Richmond Hill east to Fort McAllister 18 34 In 1967 SR 67 s path south of Pembroke was shifted to the east taking over the entire path of SR 63 therefore SR 63 Spur was redesignated as SR 67 Spur 65 66 In the middle 1970s SR 144 was extended east and south southeast taking over the route of SR 67 southeast of Fort Stewart therefore SR 67 was redesignated as SR 144 Spur 16 35 State Route 63 1968 1986 editThis article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp State Route 63LocationGlennville GeorgiaExisted1968 1986 State Route 63 SR 63 went from SR 144 to SR 196 This was cancelled in 1986 It does not show on any official GDOT state maps but is on some online maps The SR 63 was reused in 1989 along the current highway State Route 65 1921 1926 edit nbsp State Route 65LocationRabun CountyExisted1921 8 9 1926 9 10 State Route 65 SR 65 was a state highway that formerly exited in the extreme northeastern part of the state At least as early as 1919 a local road was established between the North Carolina and South Carolina state lines in Rabun County 8 By 1921 this road was designated as SR 65 8 9 By the end of 1926 this was cancelled 10 In 1932 this route was restored as SR 105 56 57 This roadway would eventually be redesignated as the northern segment of SR 28 22 23 SR 65 was reused on an unrelated route no longer part of the current route in 1932 State Route 68 1921 1932 edit nbsp State Route 68LocationCumming BufordExisted1921 8 9 January 1932 52 55 State Route 68 SR 68 was a short lived state highway in the north central part of the state When it was established between 1919 and 1921 it extended from SR 9 in Cumming southeast to SR 13 in Buford 8 9 In January 1932 SR 68 was decommissioned and redesignated as part of SR 20 52 55 SR 68 was reused for part of its current route by March 1932 State Route 69 edit nbsp State Route 69LocationTowns CountyExisted1930 50 51 1960 7 14 State Route 69 SR 69 was a very short state highway located entirely in Towns County in the extreme northern part of the state The highway traveled from US 76 SR 2 north to the North Carolina state line where it became North Carolina Highway 69 NC 69 SR 69 followed the roadway currently designated as the concurrency of SR 17 SR 515 It was formed in 1930 50 51 and was redesignated as part of SR 17 between 1957 and 1960 7 14 Between 1919 and 1921 the roadway that would eventually become SR 69 was established as an unnumbered road from SR 2 in Hiawassee to the North Carolina state line north of Hiawassee 8 9 By the end of 1930 this road was designated as SR 69 with a completed semi hard surface 50 51 A few years later the highway s location was shifted a few miles to the west Its southern terminus was still at SR 2 but began northwest of Hiawassee as it currently travels 58 59 By the end of 1935 the highway had a completed hard surface 70 76 Twenty years later SR 17 north of US 76 SR 2 was shifted to the west to travel concurrently with SR 69 1 2 Between 1957 and 1960 SR 69 was decommissioned while SR 17 stayed on this segment of highway 7 14 State Route 70 1932 1941 edit nbsp State Route 70LocationLincolntonExisted1932 51 54 1941 30 31 State Route 70 SR 70 was a state highway that existed in the east central part of the state When it was established between 1930 and 1932 it extended from Lincolnton to the South Carolina state line At this time the highway was under construction 51 54 In early 1934 SR 70 was extended south southwest to US 78 SR 10 SR 17 north northwest of Thomson 77 78 By the end of 1937 the segment of SR 70 from Lincolnton to the South Carolina state line had a sand clay or top soil surface 22 23 In 1938 a small portion of the highway southwest of Lincolnton had a completed hard surface 23 27 Late in 1941 all of SR 70 was redesignated as SR 43 to match South Carolina 30 31 SR 70 was not reused until 1968 when a county road and part of SR 74 was renumbered to SR 70 State Route 72 1930 1941 edit nbsp State Route 72LocationWoodland CovingtonExisted1930 11 50 1941 30 31 State Route 72 SR 72 was a state highway in the west central and central parts of the state It was established in 1930 on a path from US 19 SR 3 north northwest of Thomaston to SR 18 in Barnesville 11 50 Later that year the western terminus was shifted southward into Thomaston 50 51 At the end of 1933 SR 72 was extended northeast to Jackson 79 80 A few months later it was extended again this time north northeast to Covington 78 58 Three years later the entire length of the Thomaston Barnesville segment had a completed hard surface 81 24 Later that year SR 72 was extended southwest to SR 41 in Woodland 24 22 The next year the eastern terminus was under construction 23 27 By the middle of 1939 the then western terminus had a completed hard surface At this time the then eastern terminus had a sand clay or top soil surface 27 73 Near the end of 1940 SR 72 was extended north northwest along SR 41 to Manchester and then west northwest to SR 85 in Warm Springs It was possibly also extended west southwest to US 27 SR 1 in Pine Mountain but GDOT maps didn t show a highway number for this segment of highway The entire extension had a completed hard surface Meanwhile the eastern terminus was under construction 28 29 By the end of the year the eastern terminus had a completed hard surface 29 64 A few months later the entire Newton County portion that didn t have a hard surface was under construction 64 39 By the end of 1941 the entire highway was redesignated as SR 36 The Newton County portion that didn t have a hard surface had completed grading but was not surfaced 30 31 SR 72 was reused as a renumbering of most of old SR 36 and part of SR 82 to match South Carolina The rest of SR 36 became an extension of SR 98 State Route 73W edit nbsp State Route 73WLocationBulloch CountyExisted1960 7 14 1993 82 83 State Route 73W SR 73W was a state highway that existed in the southwestern part of Bulloch County Between July 1957 and June 1960 it was established and paved between two intersections with US 25 US 301 SR 73 It traveled north northwest to an intersection with SR 46 and then northeast to its northern terminus 7 14 In 1993 it was decommissioned 82 83 The entire route was in Bulloch County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 25 US 301 SR 73 south SR 73E northSouthern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E northern terminus of southern segment of SR 73 nbsp SR 46 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 25 US 301 SR 73 north SR 73E southNorthern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E southern terminus of northern segment of SR 73 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 73E edit nbsp State Route 73ELocationBulloch CountyExisted1960 7 14 1993 82 83 State Route 73E SR 73E was a state highway that existed in the southwestern part of Bulloch County Between July 1957 and June 1960 it was established on US 25 US 301 as a redesignation of SR 73 It straddled the intersection with SR 46 SR 119 7 14 In 1993 it was reverted to be part of SR 73 82 83 The entire route was in Bulloch County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 25 US 301 SR 73 south SR 73W northSouthern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E northern terminus of southern segment of SR 73 nbsp nbsp SR 46 SR 119 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 25 US 301 SR 73 north SR 73W southNorthern terminus of SR 73W and SR 73E southern terminus of northern segment of SR 73 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 85W edit nbsp State Route 85WLocationSouth of Shiloh WoodburyExisted1952 13 32 1995 84 85 State Route 85W SR 85W was a state highway that existed from south of Shiloh to Woodbury The highway that would eventually become SR 85W was established in 1930 as part of SR 85 from south of Shiloh to SR 41 in Warm Springs 11 50 By the middle of 1933 the portion of the highway from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs had a sand clay or top soil surface 54 86 The next year the segment of the highway just south southwest of Warm Springs was shifted westward to a curve into the city 58 59 At the end of 1936 two segments were under construction around Shiloh and just west southwest of Warm Springs 72 87 By the middle of 1937 a portion from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs was under construction 81 24 Near the end of the year part of the Waverly Hall Warm Springs segment had completed grading but was not surfaced 24 22 By the end of 1939 the segment from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs had a completed hard surface 74 75 In 1940 SR 163 was built from Warm Springs to Woodbury 28 29 By the middle of 1941 SR 163 s segment just northeast of Warm Springs was under construction 39 30 In 1942 a portion of SR 163 northeast of Warm Springs had completed grading but was not surfaced 31 45 By the end of 1946 SR 85 was shifted eastward to a more direct path between Columbus and Manchester Its old path between south of Shiloh and Warm Springs was redesignated as a southerly extension of SR 163 5 6 By the middle of 1950 US 27 Alt was designated on SR 163 from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs 12 13 By 1952 SR 163 was redesignated as SR 85W 13 32 That year SR 85W s segment south of Warm Springs was reverted to being designated as SR 163 32 33 The next year this was undone Also the segment of SR 85W from Warm Springs to Woodbury had completed grading but was not surfaced 33 25 Between 1960 and 1963 US 27 Alt was shifted eastward onto SR 85E from south of Shiloh to Manchester 14 18 About thirty three years later SR 85W was redesignated SR 85 Alt 84 85 State Route 85E edit nbsp State Route 85ELocationSouth of Shiloh WoodburyExisted1957 2 7 1995 84 85 State Route 85E SR 85E was a state highway between south of Shiloh and Woodbury In 1935 SR 85 was extended southeast on SR 41 to Manchester and then north northeast through Woodbury 68 69 At the end of 1936 part of SR 85 around Shiloh was under construction 72 87 In 1940 SR 85 from Manchester to approximately halfway between it and Woodbury was under construction 28 29 At the end of 1941 a portion of SR 85 just east northeast of Manchester had a completed hard surface At this time a portion of the highway from south of Woodbury had completed grading but was not surfaced 30 31 In 1943 a portion northeast of Manchester had a completed hard surface 45 63 The next year a portion south of Woodbury had a sand clay or top soil surface 63 5 By the end of 1946 SR 85 was shifted eastward to a more direct path between Columbus and Manchester Its old path between south of Shiloh and Warm Springs was redesignated as a southerly extension of SR 163 The entire length of SR 85 from south of Shiloh to Chalybeate Springs had a completed hard surface A small portion north northeast of Chalybeate Springs had a sand clay or top soil surface the portion from there to Woodbury had a completed hard surface 5 6 Between 1946 and 1948 the Chalybeate Springs Woodbury segment had a completed hard surface 6 17 Between 1955 and 1957 SR 85 from south of Shiloh to Woodbury was redesignated as SR 85E 2 7 Between 1960 and 1963 US 27 Alt was shifted eastward onto SR 85E from south of Shiloh to Manchester 14 18 About thirty two years later SR 85E was redesignated as part of the SR 85 mainline again 84 85 State Route 86 1930 1940 edit nbsp State Route 86LocationLumpkin Fannin countiesExisted1930 50 51 1940 29 64 State Route 86 SR 86 was a short lived state highway in the North Georgia mountains region of the north central part of the state In 1930 SR 86 was established from Blue Ridge northeast to the North Carolina state line west northwest of Ivy Log 50 51 In January 1932 the entire length of SR 86 was under construction 52 55 The next month the western terminus of SR 86 was shifted eastward to begin northwest of Morganton 55 88 By mid 1933 the portion of SR 86 from northwest of Morganton to Mineral Bluff had a sand clay or top soil surface 54 86 Later that year the entire length of SR 86 had a completed semi hard surface 89 90 In 1936 the entire length of SR 86 was under construction 71 72 At the beginning of 1937 SR 86 was extended southeast to US 19 SR 9 in Porter Springs 87 81 A few months later SR 86 s original segment had completed grading but was not surfaced 81 24 In late 1940 all of SR 86 was renumbered SR 60 29 64 About 37 years later the original segment of SR 86 from Mineral Bluff to the state line was used for the path of SR 60 Spur because SR 60 was rerouted over SR 245 which was cancelled 48 49 SR 86 was reused that same day as a renumbering of the duplicate SR 160 State Route 91W edit nbsp State Route 91WLocationDougherty CountyExisted1946 5 6 1973 15 16 State Route 91W SR 91W was a state highway in the southwestern part of the U S state of Georgia It functioned like an alternate route of SR 91 Between the beginning of 1945 and November 1946 it was established from SR 91 south southwest of Albany to SR 3W just west of the city 5 6 By February 1948 the entire length of the highway was hard surfaced 6 17 In 1973 SR 234 was extended to the east absorbing all of SR 91W 15 16 State Route 105 1932 1937 edit nbsp State Route 105LocationRabun CountyExisted1932 56 57 1937 22 23 State Route 105 SR 105 was a state highway that existed entirely within Rabun County in the northeastern part of the state The road that would eventually become SR 105 was established at least as early as 1919 between the North Carolina and South Carolina state lines 8 By 1921 the highway was signed as SR 65 8 9 This SR 65 was cancelled in 1926 10 SR 105 was designated in late 1932 56 57 By the end of 1934 the entire length of SR 105 was under construction 58 59 By the middle of 1937 SR 105 had completed grading but was not surfaced 81 24 Before 1938 all of SR 105 was redesignated as the northern segment of SR 28 22 23 SR 105 was reused on an unrelated route in 1938 no longer part of its current route State Route 131 edit nbsp State Route 131LocationGlynn McIntosh countiesExisted1936 76 71 1989 21 91 State Route 131 SR 131 was a state highway that was located in Glynn and McIntosh counties in the coastal part of the state The highway that would eventually become SR 131 was established between 1919 and 1921 as SR 60 from SR 27 north northwest of Brunswick to SR 25 south southwest of Darien 8 9 By the end of 1926 it was decommissioned 9 10 SR 131 was established in 1936 on what is currently SR 99 on an eastern curve between intersections with US 17 SR 25 in Darien and Eulonia 76 71 Later that year the portion from Darien to approximately Meridian was under construction 71 72 In 1938 this segment had a completed hard surface From approximately Meridian to approximately Valona the highway had completed grading but was not surfaced 23 27 In late 1939 SR 131 was established on a segment from US 84 SR 50 west northwest of Brunswick to SR 32 northwest of Brunswick and on a segment from US 25 US 341 SR 27 southwest of Darien to US 17 SR 25 south southwest of Darien However there is no indication if these were separate segments of the highway or extensions The segment from approximately Valona to Eulonia was under construction 74 75 A few months later the northern terminus of the southern segment was shifted eastward to a southwest northeast routing Also the western terminus of the central segment was shifted south southwest to connect with SR 32 at US 25 US 341 SR 27 north northwest of Brunswick 75 28 By the end of 1941 the southern segment was under construction The central segment was indicated to be on system not marked or maintained The Valona Eulonia segment of the northern segment had completed grading but was not surfaced 30 31 In 1943 the entire length of all three segments of SR 131 were redesignated as an extension of SR 99 SR 131 was moved to an alignment from South Newport to east northeast of it The entire length of this new segment had a completed hard surface 45 63 By the end of 1946 the highway was extended east southeast to the Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge This extension had a completed hard surface 5 6 By the end of the decade SR 131 was extended west southwest to Jones 17 12 In 1953 the entire length of this extension had completed grading but was not surfaced 33 25 About a decade later this segment was hard surfaced 18 34 In 1977 it was decommissioned 48 49 Twelve years later the eastern part was decommissioned as well 21 91 State Route 134 edit nbsp State Route 134LocationTelfair Wheeler countiesExisted1937 87 81 1988 21 20 State Route 134 SR 134 was a state highway that was located in Telfair and Wheeler counties It was established in early 1937 from US 341 SR 27 southwest of Towns to SR 15 in Jordan 87 81 This segment of highway remained virtually unchanged for over a decade when it was given a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 6 17 By early 1949 SR 134 was established on a segment from SR 149 south southeast of McRae to US 341 SR 27 northwest of Lumber City However there is no indication if the two segments were separate or were connected via a concurrency with US 341 SR 27 between them 17 12 By the middle of 1950 US 23 was designated on US 341 SR 27 between the two segments 12 13 In 1953 the original segment of SR 134 had completed grading but was not surfaced 33 25 The next year this segment was hard surfaced 25 1 Between 1957 and 1960 SR 15 at this segment s eastern end was shifted farther to the east Its former path was redesignated as part of SR 19 7 14 Between 1960 and 1963 the newer segment of SR 134 was paved 14 18 It wasn t until 1988 that the entire length of the highway was decommissioned 20 21 State Route 143 edit nbsp State Route 143LocationDade Walker Gordon and Pickens countiesLength61 044 mi 38 98 241 km Existed1937 87 81 1977 48 49 State Route 143 SR 143 was a state highway in the northwestern and north central parts of the state The roadway that would eventually become SR 143 was established at least as early as 1919 as part of SR 1 from LaFayette to Trenton 8 By the end of 1921 SR 1 west of LaFayette was shifted to the east and off its former alignment SR 53 was indicated to be a contingent road from LaFayette to Calhoun with a concurrency with SR 1 in LaFayette 8 9 By the end of 1926 a portion of SR 53 northwest of Calhoun had a completed semi hard surface 9 10 The decade ended with SR 53 s path west of Calhoun being shifted farther to the south The segment of SR 53 that had existed from LaFayette to Villanow was redesignated as part of SR 2 10 11 In 1930 the portion of SR 2 from approximately Naomi to Villanow had a completed semi hard surface 50 51 In February 1932 this segment s eastern end was shifted slightly to the north 55 88 In 1934 SR 2 was extended to an undetermined point northwest of LaFayette 58 59 A few years later SR 143 was established on SR 53 s former path from Vilanow to Calhoun 87 81 Later that year SR 2 was extended farther to the northwest Its southeast part northwest of LaFayette was under construction while its northwest part had completed grading but was not surfaced 24 22 By the middle of 1939 SR 2 was extended northwest to its intersection with SR 157 The western two thirds of its length in this area had completed grading but was not surfaced 27 73 Near the end of the year SR 2 was extended north northwest to an intersection with US 11 SR 58 in Trenton The eastern part of this extension was under construction 74 75 In early 1940 this last extension of SR 2 had completed grading but was not surfaced 75 28 Around the middle of the year the portions of SR 2 both north northwest and east southeast of the SR 157 intersection had a completed hard surface 28 29 The next year nearly the entire portion of SR 2 from just south southeast of Trenton to just southeast of Cooper Heights had a completed hard surface 64 39 Later that year SR 143 was designated on an eastern alignment from SR 53 east of Fairmount to SR 5 and SR 53 in Tate 39 30 By the end of 1946 SR 2 was extended to the Alabama state line Also its segment from LaFayette to Villanow was hard surfaced 5 6 By early 1948 all of SR 2 west southwest of Trenton the entire western segment of SR 143 and the eastern half of the eastern segment of SR 143 had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface The western half of its eastern segment was indicated to be projected mileage 6 17 By the middle of 1949 SR 2 was shifted much farther to the north Its former alignment from the Alabama state line to Villanow was redesignated as a western extension of the western segment of SR 143 A portion northwest of LaFayette was hard surfaced 17 12 By the middle of 1950 a portion just east southeast of Trenton was hard surfaced 12 13 In 1953 the portion west southwest of Trenton and the portion from Sugar Valley to Calhoun were hard surfaced The eastern segment s portion east of the SR 156 intersection had completed grading but was not surfaced 33 25 The next year this last segment was hard surfaced 25 1 By mid 1955 the Gordon County segment of the western segment from Villanow to Sugar Valley and the portion of the eastern segment west of the SR 156 intersection had completed grading but was not surfaced 1 2 By the end of 1960 the entire western segment was hard surfaced Nearly the entire part of the eastern segment west of the SR 156 intersection was decommissioned 7 14 By the end of 1963 the decommissioned part of the eastern segment was re instated 14 18 In 1970 a portion of the eastern segment southeast of the SR 53 intersection was hard surfaced 47 43 In 1973 the portion of the eastern segment was decommissioned was indicated to be under construction or projected mileage 15 16 In 1977 all of the western segment from the Alabama state line to northwest of Sugar Valley was redesignated as part of SR 136 All of the western segment from northwest of Sugar Valley to Calhoun was redesignated as SR 136 Conn The eastern segment from its western terminus to northeast of Sharp Top was redesignated as SR 379 northeast of this point to west of Tate was redesignated as part of SR 108 and from there to Tate was redesignated as SR 108 Conn 48 49 State Route 143 Connector edit nbsp State Route 143 ConnectorLocationGordonExisted1972 44 15 1977 48 49 State Route 143 Connector SR 143 Conn was a connecting route in the northwestern part of the state The roadway that would eventually become SR 143 Conn was established between 1963 and 1966 as an unnumbered road from SR 143 northwest of Sugar Valley to Resaca 18 34 In 1972 it was designated as SR 143 Conn ending at US 41 SR 3 44 15 In 1977 all of SR 143 west of a point northwest of Sugar Valley and all of SR 143 Conn were redesignated as parts of SR 136 48 49 State Route 148 1939 1949 edit nbsp State Route 148LocationFort Oglethorpe RinggoldExisted1939 27 73 1949 17 12 State Route 148 SR 148 was a state highway in the northwestern part of the state The highway that would eventually become SR 148 was established between 1919 and the end of 1921 as an unnumbered road from SR 1 in Fort Oglethorpe to SR 3 in Ringgold 8 9 By the end of 1926 US 41 was designated on SR 3 The entire length of the highway had a completed semi hard surface 9 10 In 1930 US 41W was designated on SR 1 50 51 By the end of 1934 US 41W was decommissioned It was redesignated as part of US 27 59 67 By the middle of 1939 the unnumbered road was designated as SR 148 27 73 1940 ended with the entire length of SR 148 having a completed hard surface 29 64 By the end of 1949 SR 2 was shifted to the north replacing the entire length of SR 148 17 12 State Route 148 1955 1966 edit nbsp State Route 148LocationMonroe CountyExisted1955 1 2 1966 18 34 State Route 148 SR 148 was a state highway in the central part of the state SR 148 was designated between the middle of 1954 and the middle of 1955 from SR 18 east southeast of Forsyth to SR 87 eas of Bolingbroke Its entire length had a completed hard surface 1 2 Between 1957 and 1960 Interstate 75 I 75 and SR 401 were built on a northeastern bypass of Forsyth The southern terminus of this bypass connected with the western terminus of SR 148 7 14 Between 1960 and 1963 I 75 and possibly SR 401 was extended southeast to just northeast of Bolingbroke replacing SR 148 northwest of this point 14 18 Between 1963 and the end of 1966 I 75 was extended southeast through the Macon area replacing SR 148 from northeast of Bolingbroke to east of this community between the I 475 interchange northwest of Bolingbroke and SR 19 Spur east of the community I 75 was under construction The remainder of SR 148 was redesignated as part of SR 19 Spur 18 34 State Route 154 1940 1946 edit nbsp State Route 154LocationPickens Dawson countiesExisted1939 74 75 1946 5 6 State Route 154 SR 154 was a state highway in the north central part of the state It was established in late 1939 from an intersection with SR 156 in Blaine to SR 5 in Talking Rock 74 75 The next year it was under construction 28 29 Before the year ended it was established on an eastern alignment from SR 108 northeast of Jasper to SR 183 northwest of Dawsonville 29 64 Around the middle of 1941 this new segment was under construction 39 30 In 1942 the original segment had completed grading but was not surfaced 31 45 By the end of 1946 both segments of SR 154 were redesignated as parts of SR 136 5 6 SR 154 was reused for a former section of SR 41 that same day State Route 158 1940 1941 edit nbsp State Route 158LocationTunnel Hill VarnellExisted1940 74 75 1941 30 31 State Route 158 SR 158 was a state highway in the northwestern part of the state In 1940 SR 158 was established from US 41 SR 3 in Tunnel Hill to SR 71 in Varnell 75 28 At the end of the next year it was renumbered SR 201 because there was already another SR 158 elsewhere in the state 30 31 State Route 160 1939 1995 edit nbsp State Route 160LocationClayton DeKalb countiesLength5 7 mi citation needed 9 2 km Existed1939 27 73 1995 84 85 State Route 160 SR 160 was a state highway in northern Clayton and southwestern DeKalb counties SR 160 was established from SR 54 in Forest Park to SR 42 south southeast of Constitution 27 73 By the end of 1949 it was extended south southeast on SR 54 and then west northwest to US 19 US 41 SR 3 17 12 In 1995 the western segment was decommissioned completely while the eastern segment was redesignated as SR 54 Conn 84 85 State Route 160 1940 1941 edit nbsp State Route 160LocationTreutlen CountyExisted1940 75 28 1941 30 31 State Route 160 SR 160 was a state highway in the central part of the state In 1940 SR 160 was established from SR 78 south of Adrian to SR 46 west of Oak Park 75 28 Later that year SR 160 s segment from south of Adrian to SR 56 northeast of Soperton had a completed hard surface The eastern part of the highway was under construction 28 29 By the end of 1941 all of SR 160 was renumbered SR 86 with the portion from northeast of Soperton to west of Oak Park having a completed hard surface as there was already another SR 160 elsewhere in the state 30 31 State Route 161 edit nbsp State Route 161LocationCedartown Cave SpringExisted1939 27 73 1963 14 18 State Route 161 SR 161 was a state highway in central Polk County and southwestern Floyd counties Its southern terminus was in Cedartown It proceeded northwest to Cave Spring to an intersection with US 411 SR 53 It was established with a completed hard surface in 1939 27 73 Between 1960 and 1963 it was redesignated as part of an extended SR 100 14 18 State Route 163 edit nbsp State Route 163LocationSouth of Shiloh WoodburyExisted1940 28 29 1952 13 32 State Route 163 SR 163 was a state highway in the west central part of the state The highway that would eventually become SR 163 was established as SR 85 from south of Shiloh to SR 41 in Warm Springs 11 50 By the middle of 1933 the entire highway had a sand clay or top soil surface 54 86 The next year the segment of the highway just south southwest of Warm Springs was shifted westward to a curve into the city 58 59 At the end of 1936 two segments were under construction around Shiloh and just west southwest of Warm Springs 72 87 By the middle of the year a portion from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs was under construction 81 24 Near the end of the year the segment form south of Shiloh to Warm Springs had completed grading but was not surfaced 24 22 1939 ended with the segment from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs having a completed hard surface 74 75 In 1940 SR 163 was built from Warm Springs to Woodbury 28 29 By the middle of 1941 SR 163 s segment just northeast of Warm Springs was under construction 39 30 In 1942 a portion of SR 163 northeast of Warm Springs had completed grading but was not surfaced 31 45 By the end of 1946 SR 85 was shifted eastward to a more direct path between Columbus and Manchester Its old path between south of Shiloh and Warm Springs was redesignated as a southerly extension of SR 163 5 6 By the middle of 1950 US 27 Alt was designated on SR 163 from south of Shiloh to Warm Springs 12 13 By 1952 SR 163 was redesignated as SR 85W 13 32 State Route 167 edit nbsp State Route 167LocationChatham Effingham Screven Jenkins countiesExisted1940 75 28 1955 1 2 State Route 167 SR 167 was a state highway that existed on a southeast to northwest path from the Savannah metropolitan area to Millen In early 1940 the highway was established on a path from US 17 SR 25 southwest of Savannah and then north northwest to US 280 SR 26 west northwest of the city 75 28 In 1942 US 280 was truncated to the west northwest its path through this area was redesignated as an east southeast extension of US 80 SR 167 was extended west northwest on US 80 SR 26 to just west northwest of the Chatham Effingham county line and then on a solo path to the north northwest to the Effingham Screven county line The original segment was indicated to be on system not marked or maintained The entire concurrency with US 80 SR 26 and its solo trek from there to Guyton had a completed hard surface 31 45 The next year SR 167 was extended northwest to Millen 45 63 In 1944 a small portion of the highway north northwest of Guyton had a completed hard surface 63 5 By the end of 1948 the original segment was indicated to have projected mileage A small portion between Guyton and Egypt had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface Another small portion northwest of that one had completed grading but was not surfaced 6 17 By 1952 the segment northwest of US 80 SR 26 was redesignated as a southeast extension of SR 17 with a portion southeast of Millen having completed grading but not being surfaced 13 32 By the middle of 1955 the original segment of SR 167 was decommissioned 1 2 State Route 170 edit nbsp State Route 170LocationDade Walker countiesExisted1940 29 64 1974 16 35 State Route 170 SR 170 was a state highway that was located in the northwestern part of the state in Dade and Walker counties At the end of 1940 it was established on a path from SR 157 south southeast of Trenton east south to a point just west of SR 193 southeast of the city 29 64 About a year later the entire length was under construction 30 31 In 1945 the eastern terminus was shifted north northwest to end at an intersection with SR 193 east northeast of Trenton 5 6 By the end of 1948 the eastern terminus of the highway was truncated to end at a point east of Trenton 6 17 By the end of 1951 the eastern terminus was extended north northeast and then northwest to end at another intersection with SR 157 west of Chattanooga Valley This made the eastern terminus now the northern one Most of this extension had a sand clay topsoil or stabilized earth surface The northern part of it had completed grading but was not surfaced The portion east of the southern terminus was hard surfaced 13 32 In 1953 the entire extension had completed grading but was not surfaced 33 25 By mid 1955 it had a sand clay topsoil or stabilized earth surface 1 2 By the middle of 1957 this extension had a topsoil or gravel unpaved surface 2 7 Between 1960 and the end of 1963 the northern part of the extension was paved 14 18 At the end of the decade the entire length of SR 170 was hard surfaced 66 46 In 1974 SR 157 was shifted eastward replacing all of the north south portion of SR 170 with the old alignment being redesignated as SR 189 The east west portion of SR 170 was simply decommissioned 16 35 State Route 175 editThis section is about the former state highway For the former proposed Interstate Highway see Interstate 175 Georgia nbsp State Route 175LocationLowndes Lanier countiesExisted1940 28 29 1969 46 47 State Route 175 SR 175 was a state highway that existed in the south central part of the state in Lowndes and Lanier counties In 1940 it was established from SR 122 and SR 125 in Barretts to US 84 SR 38 in Naylor 28 29 By the end of 1948 a portion of the highway from east southeast of Barretts at the Lowndes Lanier county line to west northwest of the SR 31 intersection northwest of Naylor had completed grading but was not surfaced From this point to the second crossing of the county line it had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 6 17 About five years later the western terminus was truncated to a point west northwest of the SR 31 intersection 33 25 By the middle of 1955 it was further truncated to the intersection with US 221 SR 31 1 2 By the end of 1963 the entire remaining segment of highway had a topsoil or gravel unpaved surface 14 18 In 1969 SR 175 was decommissioned 46 47 State Route 176 edit nbsp State Route 176LocationCobb CountyLength15 mi 92 24 km Existed1940 29 64 2010 93 94 State Route 176 SR 176 was a state highway in the northwestern part of the state In late 1940 it was established from SR 120 in Lost Mountain to SR 92 in New Hope 29 64 In 1942 the highway was extended south southeast to SR 6 in Powder Springs The extension was indicated to be on system not marked or maintained 31 45 The next year the southern part of the extension had a completed hard surface 45 63 By the end of 1948 the entire length of the extension was hard surfaced A portion of the original segment just west of Lost Mountain had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 6 17 By the middle of 1950 this portion was hard surfaced 12 13 In 1953 a portion west of Lost Mountain had completed grading but was not surfaced 33 25 Two years later the New Hope Lost Mountain segment had a sand clay topsoil or stabilized earth surface 1 2 By the middle of 1957 this segment was indicated to have a topsoil or gravel unpaved surface 2 7 Before the decade ended the New Hope Lost Mountain segment was paved Also an unnumbered road was built from Lost Mountain to US 41 SR 3 in Acworth 7 14 In 1969 the New Hope to Lost Mountain segment was shifted to the northeast onto this unnumbered road Its former alignment was redesignated as SR 92 Conn 46 47 In 2010 SR 176 was decommissioned 93 94 This section is missing mileposts for junctions Please help by adding them This table shows the last alignment of the highway The entire route was in Cobb County LocationmikmDestinationsNotes Powder Springs nbsp nbsp US 278 SR 6 Hiram Lithia SpringsSouthern terminus Macland nbsp SR 360 Dallas Marietta Lost Mountain nbsp SR 120 Dallas Marietta Acworth nbsp nbsp US 41 SR 3 Cartersville KennesawNorthern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 179 edit nbsp State Route 179LocationCalvary VadaExisted1940 29 64 1987 19 20 State Route 179 SR 179 was a state highway that existed in the southwestern part of the state It traversed Grady and Baker counties At the end of 1940 SR 179 was established from SR 111 in Calvary to US 84 SR 38 in Whigham 29 64 In 1942 it was extended north northwest to just north of the Grady Mitchell county line and then west to SR 97 in Vada The entire highway was indicated as being on system not marked or maintained 31 45 By the end of 1949 SR 262 was established on the Grady Mitchell county line replacing the east west part of SR 179 17 12 By the middle of 1950 a portion north northwest of Whigham was hard surfaced Two small portions between Whigham and the Grady Mitchell county line had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 12 13 By the end of 1951 the southern two thirds of this segment was hard surfaced A portion south southeast of Whigham had completed grading but was not surfaced 13 32 The next year this portion near Whigham was hard surfaced 32 25 By the middle of 1954 the entire Calvary Whigham segment was hard surfaced A portion south of the SR 262 intersection was shifted eastward and had a sand clay topsoil or stabilized earth surface 25 1 About a year later this portion was hard surfaced 1 2 In 1987 SR 179 was decommissioned 19 20 State Route 179 Connector edit nbsp State Route 179 ConnectorLocationNear Amsterdam CalvaryExisted1969 46 47 1987 19 20 State Route 179 Connector SR 179 Conn was a connector route of SR 179 that existed in the southwestern part of the state In 1969 it was established between US 27 SR 1 east southeast of Amsterdam to SR 111 and SR 179 in Calvary 46 47 In 1987 SR 179 Conn was decommissioned 19 20 State Route 181 1940 1941 edit nbsp State Route 181LocationSocial CircleExisted1940 29 64 1941 30 31 State Route 181 SR 181 was a short lived state highway that existed entirely in Walton County The roadway that would eventually become SR 181 was built between 1921 and the end of 1926 as an unnumbered road from SR 11 in Social Circle to SR 12 southeast of the city The entire length of this road had a sand clay or top soil surface 9 10 In 1930 this road was designated as the entire length of a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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