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List of former state routes in Georgia (200–699)

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 204 Spur edit

 

State Route 204 Spur

LocationSavannah
Length7.2 mi[1] (11.6 km)
Existed1989–2020

State Route 204 Spur (SR 204 Spur) was a spur route of SR 204 that connected the mainline to Skidaway Island. Segments of SR 204 Spur are named Montgomery Cross Road, Waters Avenue, Whitfield Avenue, Diamond Causeway, and Tidewater Way.[1] SR 204 Spur was turned over to local control in February 2020 as part of the deal with the Georgia Department of Transportation that extended SR 17 onto the Jimmy DeLoach Parkway and truncated the eastern terminus of SR 204 to SR 21.

State Route 205 edit

 

State Route 205

LocationCherokee County
Existed1948[2][3]–1985[4][5]

State Route 205 (SR 205) was a state highway that existed in the north-central part of the state. It was assigned to Bells Ferry Road in Cherokee County. Between 1946 and the end of 1948, it was established between SR 92 at a point southwest of Canton and SR 5 in the city.[2][3] By the middle of 1955, all of the highway except for the southern terminus was hard surfaced. The portion at the southern terminus had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[6][7] About two years later, this southern part was paved.[7][8] In 1970, SR 92's segment between Acworth and Woodstock was shifted southward, and SR 205 was extended southward on SR 92's old alignment to SR 92's new path.[9][10] In 1985, it was decommissioned.[4][5]

State Route 207 edit

 

State Route 207

LocationOconee County
Length2.1 mi[citation needed] (3.4 km)
Existed1942[11][12]–1983[13][4]

State Route 207 (SR 207) was a 2.1-mile-long (3.4 km) state highway that existed in the central part of the state, completely within Oconee County. It is now known as Hog Mountain Road. In 1942, SR 207 was established from SR 53 west-northwest of Watkinsville to US 129/SR 15/SR 24 north-northeast of the city. Its entire length was indicated to be "on system–not marked or maintained".[11][12] The next year, the entire highway had a "completed hard surface".[12][14] In 1983, it was decommissioned.[13][4]

State Route 209 edit

 

State Route 209

LocationOconee County
Existed1942[11][12]–1983[13][4]

State Route 209 (SR 209) was a state highway in the Athens area. It existed entirely within Oconee County. In 1942, it was established from US 78/SR 10 southwest of Bogart, north-northwest to US 29/SR 8 in Bogart, and then northeast to the Oconee–Clarke county line. This northern terminus was just south-southeast of the Oconee–Clarke–BarrowJackson county quadripoint. The entire length of the highway was indicated to be "on system–not marked or maintained".[11][12] The next year, the southern half of the highway had a "completed hard surface".[12][14] By the end of 1946, the southern terminus was shifted to another intersection with US 78/SR 10, but at a point south-southeast of Bogart. The entire length of this new part was hard surfaced. The northern terminus was truncated to the US 29/SR 8 intersection in Bogart.[15][2] In 1983, SR 209 was decommissioned.[13][4]

State Route 210 edit

 

State Route 210

LocationLookout Mountain
Existed1941[16][11]–1977[17][18]

State Route 210 (SR 210) was a very short state highway that was located in Lookout Mountain. At the end of 1941, it was established from SR 157 and SR 193 just west of the city limits of Lookout Mountain and then east and northeast to the Tennessee state line, at the Chattanooga city limits.[16][11] The next year, the entire length of the highway had a "completed hard surface".[11][12] Between 1955 and the middle of 1957, it was shifted to a different alignment. It traveled from SR 157 northwest to the Tennessee state line, at the Lookout Mountain city limits. This new alignment was paved.[7][8] Between 1963 and 1966, the northern terminus was shifted slightly to the east. The highway then traveled on a south-southwest to north-northeast direction.[19][20] In 1977, SR 210 was redesignated as part of SR 189.[17][18]

State Route 213 edit

 

State Route 213

LocationWalton, Newton, Jasper, Morgan counties
Existed1941[16][11]–1982[21][13]

State Route 213 (SR 213) was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state. It traversed parts of Walton, Newton, Jasper, and Morgan counties. The roadway that would eventually become SR 213 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. Its entire length had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[22][23] In 1930, it was designated as SR 60.[24][25] In 1937, part of SR 142 was established on a path from Farrar to Newborn.[26][27] At the end of 1940, SR 60 was redesignated as SR 181. The segment of SR 142 was under construction.[28][29] At the end of the next year, SR 181 was redesignated as SR 213.[16][11] In 1942, SR 142's segment had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[11][12] The next year, SR 213 was designated on a southern segment. It extended from SR 36 south-southwest of Covington, then southeast and east to SR 11 in Mansfield. It may have also been designated from Mansfield east-northeast to SR 142 in Newborn and then north-northwest to SR 12 east of Covington; however, these segments were not specifically designated on maps. The SR 142 segment had a sand clay or top soil surface.[12][14] By the end of 1946, the northern segment of SR 213 was redesignated as SR 229, which was also designated on the segment of roadway from Newborn to east of Covington. The Mansfield–Newborn segment of SR 213 was hard surfaced.[15][2] By the end of 1948, SR 213 was extended east-southeast from Newborn to SR 83 in Pennington. From its western terminus to just west-southwest of Mansfield, and from east-southeast of Newborn to Pennington, the highway had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface. From just west-southwest of Mansfield to east-southeast of Newborn, which included the SR 142 segment (with which SR 213 had a brief concurrency), it was hard surfaced.[2][3] In 1953, the segment of SR 213 from east-southeast of Newborn to Pennington was hard surfaced. From its western terminus to just west of Mansfield, it had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[30][31] Between 1955 and the middle of 1957, the western end of SR 213 was paved.[7][8] At the end of the 1950s, all of the highway was paved.[8][32] In 1982, SR 213 was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 213 Spur edit

 

State Route 213 Spur

LocationPennington
Existed1963[32][19]–1982[21][13]

State Route 213 Spur (SR 213 Spur) was a spur route of SR 213 that existed entirely in Pennington, which is southwest of Madison, in Morgan County. Between 1960 and the end of 1963, SR 213 Spur was established in Pennington from SR 213 to SR 83.[32][19] In 1982, it was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 214 edit

 

State Route 214

LocationMacon County
Existed1942[11][12]–1982[21][13]

State Route 214 (SR 214) was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state. It was entirely within Macon County. In 1942, it was established from SR 26 east-southeast of Fountainville to another intersection with SR 26 in Oglethorpe.[11][12] The next year, its entire length had a "completed hard surface".[12][14] The highway remained virtually unchanged for the next 40 years. In 1982, SR 214 was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 214 Bypass edit

 

State Route 214 Bypass

LocationOglethorpe
Existed1965[19][20]–1982[21][13]

State Route 214 Bypass (SR 214 Byp.) was a bypass route of SR 214 just west of Oglethorpe. Between 1963 and 1966, it was established from SR 26/SR 49 southwest of the city to SR 214/SR 214 Spur northwest of it.[19][20] In 1982, SR 214 Byp. was decommissioned and redesignated as the southern part of SR 128 Byp.[21][13]

State Route 214 Spur edit

 

State Route 214 Spur

LocationOglethorpe
Existed1965[19][20]–1982[21][13]

State Route 214 Spur (SR 214 Spur) was a spur route of SR 214 that existed mostly within the city limits of Oglethorpe. Between 1963 and 1966, SR 214 Spur was established from SR 214/SR 214 Byp. northwest of Oglethorpe to SR 90/SR 128 in the city.[19][20] In 1982, SR 214 Spur was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 217 edit

 

State Route 217

LocationMacon County
Existed1942[11][12]–1969[33][9]

State Route 217 (SR 217) was a state highway that existed entirely within Macon County. In 1942, it was established from SR 128 north of Oglethorpe to SR 127 south-southeast of Reynolds.[11][12] Between 1963 and 1966, the entire length of the highway had a "topsoil or gravel" surface.[19][20] In 1969, SR 217 was decommissioned.[33][9]

State Route 218 edit

 

State Route 218

LocationWalker and Catoosa counties
Existed1942[11][12]–1985[4][5]

State Route 218 (SR 218) was a short state highway that existed in Walker and Catoosa counties. It is currently known as Lakeview Drive. In 1942, it was established from US 27/SR 1 in Lakeview to SR 146 southeast of that city.[11][12] Between November 1946 and February 1948, the entire highway was hard surfaced.[2][3] In 1985, SR 218 was decommissioned.[4][5]

State Route 221 edit

 

State Route 221

LocationJasper County
Existed1943[12][14]–1983[13][4]

State Route 221 (SR 221) was a state highway that existed in the west-central part of Jasper County. In 1943, it was established from SR 16 west of Monticello to SR 11 in Prospect.[12][14] A decade later, the entire highway had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[30][31] Between 1957 and the end of 1960, the entire length was paved.[8][32] The highway remained virtually unchanged for the next two decades. In 1983, it was decommissioned.[13][4]

State Route 222 edit

 

State Route 222

LocationMeriwether County
Existed1943[12][14]–1986[5][34]

State Route 222 (SR 222) was a short state highway that existed entirely within the southeastern part of Meriwether County. Today, it is known as Jesse Cole Road. In 1943, it was established from SR 85 east-northeast of Manchester to SR 173 north of that city. Its entire length had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[12][14] By the end of 1948, its entire length had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[2][3] Between 1955 and the middle of 1957, SR 85 was redesignated as SR 85E.[7][8] By the end of 1960, the entire length of SR 222 was paved.[8][32] In 1986, this highway was decommissioned.[5][34]

State Route 226 edit

 

State Route 226

LocationDawson and Hall counties
Existed1943[12][14]–1980[35][36]

State Route 226 (SR 226) was a state highway that existed in the north-central part of the state. It traversed parts of Dawson and Hall counties. In 1943, it was established from SR 53 to SR 9E at two different points northwest of Gainesville.[12][14] By the end of 1946, its entire length was hard surfaced.[15][2] Between 1957 and the end of 1960, the southern terminus was truncated to the Hall–Dawson county line.[8][32] Between 1963 and 1966, it was further truncated to a point just west of the county line.[19][20] In 1968, yet another truncation left the southern terminus at the northern shore of Lake Lanier.[37][33] In 1980, SR 226 was decommissioned.[35][36]

State Route 229 edit

 

State Route 229

LocationWalton, Newton, Jasper counties
Existed1943[12][14]–1982[21][13]

State Route 229 (SR 229) was a state highway in the central part of the state. It traversed parts of Walton, Newton, and Jasper counties. The roadway that would eventually become SR 229 was an unnumbered road built between 1921 and the end of 1926 between SR 11 in Social Circle to SR 12 southeast of the city. Its entire length had a "sand clay or top soil" surface.[22][23] In 1930, this road was designated as SR 60.[24][25] In 1937, part of SR 142 was established on a path from Farrar to Newborn.[26][27] At the end of 1940, SR 60 was redesignated as SR 181. The segment of SR 142 was under construction.[28][29] At the end of 1941, SR 181 was redesignated as SR 213.[16][11] The next year, the SR 142 segment had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[11][12] In 1943, SR 213 was designated on a southern alignment, which may have included a portion from Mansfield east-northeast to SR 142 in Newborn and then north-northwest to SR 12 east of Covington. However, these segments were not indicated on maps. The SR 142 segment had a sand clay or top soil surface. SR 229 was designated from SR 11 in Monticello to SR 142 north-northwest of Farrar. The southern part of this segment had a "completed hard surface"; its northern part had a sand clay or top soil surface.[12][14] By the end of 1946, the northern segment of SR 213 was redesignated as part of SR 229. It was also designated on a segment from Newborn to east of Covington; however, there was no indication if the three segments were connected by concurrencies with other highways or not. The northern portion of the segment from Monticello to north-northwest of Farrar had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[15][2] By the end of 1948, the SR 142 segment was hard surfaced. SR 229's segment from Newborn to east of Covington had a sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth surface.[2][3] By the end of 1951, the northern segment of SR 229 was hard surfaced.[38][39] The portion from Monticello to north-northwest of Farrar was also hard surfaced.[30][31] Between 1957 and the end of 1960, the portion from Newborn to east of Covington was paved.[8][32] In 1982, SR 229 was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 235 edit

 

State Route 235

LocationFulton County
Length2.2 mi[citation needed] (3.5 km)
Existed1944[12][14]–1963[32][19]

Former SR 235 was a 2.2-mile-long (3.5 km)[citation needed] loop road from SR 9 in what is now the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta. Heading south, it pulled off of SR 9 (Roswell Road) onto Habersham Road NW, turning left onto Chatham Road NW, following it to Andrews Drive NW, turning right onto Andrews Drive NW and following it until rejoining SR 9 (Peachtree Road). The road first appeared in 1944,[12][14] and was deleted between 1961 and 1963, when it was converted to a local road.[32][19][40]

State Route 238 edit

 

State Route 238

LocationTroup County
Existed1946[15][2]–1975[41][42]

State Route 238 (SR 238) was a short state highway that existed in the west-central part of the state. It was entirely within Troup County. Between 1945 and the end of 1946, it was established from the Alabama state line west-southwest of LaGrange to US 29/SR 14 southwest of Lees Crossing.[15][2] By the end of 1948, the entire highway, except for the westernmost portion had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[2][3] The next year, the western terminus also had that same type of surface.[3][43] By the middle of 1950, all of the highway was hard surfaced.[43][38] In 1975, SR 238 was decommissioned.[41][42]

State Route 239 edit

 

State Route 239

LocationWalker and Chattooga counties
Existed1946[15][2]–1976[42][17]

State Route 239 (SR 239) was a state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state. It traversed the northwestern part of Walker County and the southwestern part of Chattooga County. Between 1945 and the end of 1946, it was established from SR 48 in Cloudland to SR 157 southeast of Rising Fawn. Its entire length was hard surfaced.[15][2] Almost exactly 30 years later, the southern portion of SR 157 was shifted southeastward, replacing all of SR 239.[42][17]

State Route 243 edit

 

State Route 243

LocationGordon to Milledgeville
Length21.2 mi[44] (34.1 km)
Existed1946[15][2]–2019[45]

State Route 243 (SR 243) was a state highway that existed on a path from southwest of Gordon to Milledgeville. It traversed portions of northwestern Wilkinson and south-central Baldwin counties. The southernmost 13.4 miles (21.6 km) was part of the Fall Line Freeway, a highway that connects Columbus and Augusta.

State Route 244 edit

 

State Route 244

LocationTroup County
Existed1948[2][3]–1975[41][42]

State Route 244 (SR 244) was a short state highway that existed in the west-central part of the state. It was completely within Troup County. Between 1946 and the end of 1948, it was established from the Alabama state line west-northwest of LaGrange to SR 109. Its entire length was hard surfaced.[2][3] In 1975, it was decommissioned.[41][42]

State Route 245 edit

 

State Route 245

LocationMineral BluffMcCaysville
Existed1948[2][3]–1977[17][18]

State Route 245 (SR 245) was a state highway in Fannin County. Between 1946 and 1948, SR 245 was designated from Mineral Bluff to McCaysville. Each terminus had a completed hard surface; the central part had a sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth surface.[2][3] The next year, the entire length of SR 245 was hard surfaced.[3][43] In 1977, SR 60's path from northwest of Morganton to the North Carolina state line was shifted westward, replacing all of SR 245. Its former path from Mineral Bluff to the state line was redesignated as SR 60 Spur.[17][18]

State Route 248 edit

 

State Route 248

LocationWashington and Hancock counties
Existed1949[3][43]–1982[21][13]

State Route 248 (SR 248) was a state highway that existed in the east-central part of the state. It traversed the north-central portion of Washington County and the east-central portion of Hancock County. Between 1948 and the end of 1949, it was established from SR 102 north-northeast of Warthen to SR 16 in Jewell. The southern half of the highway had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[3][43] In 1953, this portion had completed grading, but was not surfaced. The Hancock County portion was hard surfaced.[30][31] Between 1955 and the middle of 1957, the entire highway was paved.[7][8] In 1982, it was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 249 edit

 

State Route 249

LocationMurrayvilleDahlonega
Existed1949[3][43]–1957[7][8]

State Route 249 (SR 249) was a short-lived state highway. Between 1946 and 1948, an unnumbered road was built from Murrayville to Dahlonega; it had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[2][3] The next year, the unnumbered road between Murrayville and Dahlonega was designated as SR 249.[3][43] By the middle of 1950, all of SR 249 was hard surfaced.[43][38] By 1957, SR 60 was extended south-southwest on US 19/SR 9 into Dahlonega, then south-southeast to Gainesville, replacing all of SR 249.[7][8]

State Route 250 edit

 

State Route 250

LocationTattnall and Evans counties
Existed1949[3][43]–1985[4][5]

State Route 250 (SR 250) was a state highway that existed in Tattnall and Evans counties. The roadway that would eventually become SR 250 was established between 1945 and the end of 1946 as an eastern segment of SR 64 from US 25/SR 73 south of Claxton to US 280/SR 30 east-southeast of Daisy. This segment was indicated to be "projected mileage".[15][2] By the end of 1948, the southern terminus of this segment was completed grading, but was not surfaced.[2][3] By the end of 1949, SR 250 was established on a slightly different alignment. It began at an intersection with US 25/US 301/SR 73 south of Claxton, at a point farther south than the eastern segment of SR 64 did. Its eastern terminus was at SR 129 south-southeast of Claxton, in the northwestern part of Camp Stewart.[3][43] By the end of 1951, the portion of SR 64 on either side of the SR 250 intersection had a "sand clay, topsoil, or stabilized earth" surface.[38][39] In 1953, the entire Tattnall County portion of SR 64 had completed grading, but was not surfaced. The northern terminus of it was shifted westward to end in Daisy.[30][31] By the middle of 1957, SR 250 was shifted northwest, replacing the entire length of the eastern segment of SR 64.[7][8] By the end of 1963, the entire length of SR 250 was paved.[32][19] In 1985, SR 250 was decommissioned.[4][5]

State Route 258 edit

 

State Route 258

LocationTroup County
Existed1949[3][43]–1965[19][20]

State Route 258 (SR 258) was a state highway that existed in the west-central part of the state. It was entirely within Troup County. Between February 1948 and April 1949, it was established from US 27/SR 1 west-northwest of Hogansville to US 29/SR 14 in that city.[3][43] In 1953, the entire length of the highway was hard surfaced.[30][31] Between June 1963 and the end of 1966, it was redesignated as a southern extension of SR 54.[19][20]

State Route 259 edit

 

State Route 259

LocationTarboro–Atkinson
Existed1949[3][43]–1980[46][35]

State Route 259 (SR 259) was a state highway in the southeastern part of the state. It traversed the northwestern part of Camden County and the southeastern part of Brantley County. Between February 1948 and April 1949, it was established from SR 252 in Tarboro to US 84/SR 50 in Atkinson. The Camden portion of the highway had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[3][43] Between 1963 and the end of 1966, the entire length had a "topsoil or gravel" surface.[19][20] In 1968, the northern half of the Brantley County portion was hard surfaced.[37][33] In 1978, the rest of the highway was hard surfaced.[18][46] At the beginning of 1980, SR 259 was decommissioned.[46][35]

State Route 261 edit

 

State Route 261

LocationLong County
Existed1949[3][43]–1981[36][21]

State Route 261 (SR 261) was a state highway that existed in the eastern part of the state. It was entirely within Long County. Between February 1948 and April 1949, it was established from the Altamaha River on the Wayne–Long county line to US 25/US 301/SR 23 south of Glennville.[3][43] By August 1950, it was extended northeast to an intersection with SR 196 at a point south-southeast of Glennville.[43][38] By the end of 1951, the southern terminus of the highway was shifted northwest to be just north-northwest of the Wayne–Long–Tattnall county tripoint.[38][39] In 1952, the southern terminus of SR 261 was reverted to its former location. The northern half of the highway had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[39][31] Between 1957 and the end of 1960, the southern terminus was truncated slightly to the northeast.[8][32] Between 1963 and the end of 1965, the southern terminus was once again reverted to its former location. At this time, the entire highway had a "topsoil or gravel" surface.[19][20] In 1967, the northern half was hard surfaced.[47][37] In 1981, SR 261 was decommissioned.[36][21]

State Route 263 edit

 

State Route 263

LocationTaylor County
Existed1949[3][43]–1987[34][48]

State Route 263 (SR 263) was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state. It was entirely within Taylor County. Between February 1948 and April 1949, it was established from SR 128 north of Reynolds to US 19/SR 3 south-southwest of Salem.[3][43] In 1953, the southern half of the highway was hard surfaced.[30][31] By the middle of 1955, the northern half had a "sand clay, topsoil, or stabilized earth" surface.[6][7] By mid-1957, this segment was paved.[7][8] In 1987, SR 263 was decommissioned.[34][48]

State Route 265 edit

 

State Route 265

LocationTelfair County
Existed1949[3][43]–1976[42][17]

State Route 265 (SR 265) was a very short state highway that existed in the south-central part of the state. It was entirely within Telfair County. Between February 1948 and April 1949, it was established from SR 117 east-northeast of Jacksonville to SR 149 northeast of that town.[3][43] Between September 1953 and June 1954, the entire highway was hard surfaced.[31][6] In 1976, the portion of SR 149 south of the SR 265 intersection was shifted northeastward, replacing all of SR 265.[42][17]

State Route 267 edit

 

State Route 267

LocationMarion and Talbot counties
Existed1950[43][38]–1997[49][50]

State Route 267 (SR 267) was a short state highway that existed in the west-central part of the state. Between April 1949 and August 1950, it was established from SR 41 south of Geneva to US 80/SR 22 west-southwest of it. The entire length of the highway had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[43][38] In 1953, the northern terminus was shifted slightly to the west-southwest.[30][31] Between July 1957 and June 1960, the entire length was paved.[8][32] By the middle of 1963, the northern half of the highway was redesignated as part of SR 355.[32][19] In 1997, SR 267 was decommissioned.[49][50]

State Route 269 edit

 

State Route 269

LocationTaliaferro County
Existed1950[43][38]–1983[13][4]

State Route 269 (SR 269) was a short state highway that existed in the east-central part of the state. The highway was completely within Taliaferro County; however, the southern part traveled on the Warren–Taliaferro county line. Between April 1949 and August 1950, the highway was established from SR 12 southeast of Crawfordville to SR 47 in Sharon. Its entire length had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface.[43][38] By the end of 1951, the entire highway was hard surfaced.[38][39] In 1983, SR 269 was decommissioned.[13][4]

State Route 276 edit

 

State Route 276

LocationLong County
Existed1950[43][38]–1981[36][21]

State Route 276 (SR 276) was a short state highway that existed in the eastern part of the state. It was entirely within Long County. Between April 1949 and August 1950, it was established from a point west-northwest of Ludowici to US 25/US 301/SR 23 northwest of the city.[43][38] Between 1963 and 1966, the southern terminus was shifted slightly westward. At this time, the entire length of the highway had a "topsoil or gravel" surface.[19][20] In 1981, SR 276 was decommissioned.[36][21]

State Route 277 edit

 

State Route 277

LocationLaurens County
Existed1950[43][38]–1960[8][32]

State Route 277 (SR 277) was a short-lived state highway that existed in the central part of the state. It was completely within Laurens County. Between April 1949 and August 1950, it was established from the Dodge–Laurens–Bleckley county tripoint to US 80/SR 19/SR 26 in Dublin. The entire Dexter–Dublin segment was hard surfaced.[43][38] Between September 1953 and June 1954, the southern terminus of the highway was truncated to just west of Dexter.[31][6] By the middle of 1955, the southern terminus was reverted to just south-southeast of its former location.[6][7] By mid-1957, the southern terminus was shifted to its original location.[7][8] By the middle of 1960, SR 277 was redesignated as an eastern extension of SR 257.[8][32]

State Route 287 edit

 

State Route 287

LocationTaylor County
Length3 mi[citation needed] (4.8 km)
Existed1950[43][38]–1987[34][48]

State Route 287 (SR 287) was a short north–south state highway that existed in the central part of the state. It was completely within Taylor County. Between April 1949 and August 1950, SR 287 was established from a point just south of the Macon–Taylor county line southeast of Reynolds to SR 96 east of that city.[43][38] In 1952, the southern terminus was truncated to the county line.[39][30] The next year, the entire highway was hard surfaced.[30][31] By the middle of 1954, the southern terminus was truncated slightly.[31][6] By the middle of 1955, the southern terminus was reverted to the county line.[6][7] Near the end of the decade, the southern terminus was truncated again to the point that it was in 1954.[7][8] Between 1963 and 1966, the southern terminus was reverted once again to the county line.[19][20] In 1987, SR 287 was decommissioned.[34][48]

State Route 289 edit

 

State Route 289

LocationAppling and Jeff Davis counties
Length9 mi[citation needed] (14 km)
Existed1951[38][39]–1980[46][35]

State Route 289 (SR 289) was a state highway that existed in the southeastern part of the state. It traveled along the ApplingJeff Davis county line. Between 1950 and 1952, it was established from US 23/SR 15 south-southwest of Graham to US 341/SR 27 in the city.[38][39] In 1953, the central portion of the highway was shifted eastward to a more direct path between its termini. The portion of the highway north of the Big Satilla River had completed grading, but was not surfaced.[30][31] Between 1960 and the middle of 1963, the portion south of the river was given the same treatment.[32][19] In 1970, the portion north of the river was hard surfaced.[9][10] Between 1978 and March 1980, SR 289 was decommissioned.[46][35]

State Route 290 edit

 

State Route 290

LocationQuitman County
Length2 mi[citation needed] (3.2 km)
Existed1951[38][39]–1981[36][21]

State Route 290 (SR 290) was a short north–south state highway that existed in the southwestern part of the state. It was entirely within Quitman County. Between 1950 and 1952, it was established as an S-shaped highway from Hatcher to US 82/SR 50 west-southwest of Springvale.[38][39] In 1952, the southern terminus was shifted westward. This put the highway on a nearly due north–south direction.[39][30] Between September 1953 and June 1954, the entire length of the highway was hard surfaced.[31][6] In 1981, SR 290 was decommissioned.[36][21]

State Route 291 edit

 

State Route 291

LocationQuitman County
Length2 mi[citation needed] (3.2 km)
Existed1951[38][39]–1981[36][21]

State Route 291 (SR 291) was a short state highway that existed in the southwestern part of the state. It was located completely within Quitman County. Between August 1950 and the end of 1951, it was established as an S-shaped highway from Morris to US 82/SR 50 nearly due wet of Springvale.[38][39] In 1952, the southern terminus was shifted slightly. This put the highway on a nearly due southwest–northeast direction.[39][30] The next year, the southern terminus was shifted slightly to the northwest.[30][31] By the middle of 1954, the southern terminus was extended slightly to the west. The entire length of the highway was hard surfaced.[31][6] Between 1963 and 1966, the alignment of the highway was shifted to become a J-shaped highway.[19][20] In 1981, SR 291 was decommissioned.[36][21]

State Route 294 edit

 

State Route 294

LocationBartow County
Existed1957[7][8]–1965[19][20]

State Route 294 (SR 294) was a short state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state. It traveled completely within Bartow County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 294 was established in 1952 as SR 294N from Allatoona Dam east of Cartersville to SR 20 northeast of the city.[39][30] The next year, the entire length of SR 294N was hard surfaced.[30][31] Between June 1955 and July 1957, it was redesignated as SR 294.[7][8] Between 1963 and 1966, it was again redesignated as SR 294N.[19][20] This roadway would eventually become SR 20 Spur.[51][52]

State Route 294N edit

 

State Route 294N

LocationBartow County
Existed1952[39][30]–1957[7][8]

 

State Route 294N

LocationBartow County
Existed1965[19][20]–1994[51][52]

State Route 294N (SR 294N) was a short state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state. It traveled completely within Bartow County. It was established in 1952 from Allatoona Dam east of Cartersville to SR 20 northeast of the city.[39][30] The next year, all of SR 294N was hard surfaced.[30][31] Between June 1955 and July 1957, the highway was redesignated as SR 294.[7][8] Between 1963 and 1966, SR 294 was again redesignated as SR 294N.[19][20] In 1994, SR 294N was redesignated as SR 20 Spur.[51][52]

State Route 294S edit

 

State Route 294S

LocationEmerson
Existed1952[39][30]–1977[17][18]

State Route 294S (SR 294S) was a short state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state. It traveled completely within Bartow County. Nearly the entire highway was within the city limits of Emerson. In 1952, it was established from US 41/SR 3 in Emerson to just west of Red Top Mountain State Park in the far northeastern part of the city.[39][30] The next year, the entire highway was hard surfaced.[30][31] By the middle of 1955, US 41/SR 3 in the area was shifted eastward; the western terminus of SR 294S was then at SR 293.[6][7] In 1977, SR 294S was decommissioned.[17][18]

State Route 295 edit

 

State Route 295

LocationAtlanta
Existed1954[31][6]–1957[7][8]

State Route 295 (SR 295) was a short-lived state highway in the city of Atlanta. Between September 1953 and June 1954, it was established on what was listed on maps as simply "Expressway" (a predecessor of I-75/I-85/Downtown Connector) from US 19/US 41/SR 3 at Lakewood Avenue to University Avenue.[31][6] Between 1955 and the middle of 1957, it was decommissioned.[7][8]

State Route 300 (1959–1982) edit

 

State Route 300

LocationJasper and Putnam counties
Length20.3 mi[53] (32.7 km)
Existed1960[8][32]–1982[21][13]

State Route 300 (SR 300) was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state. It followed a route between Monticello and US 129/US 441/SR 24, near the Rock Eagle State 4-H Club Center north of Eatonton. It was established in 1960.[8][32] Later that year, a small portion at the eastern terminus was paved.[32][19] By 1967, the section from its western terminus to the intersection with SR 142 was paved.[20][47] In 1970, the entire length of the highway was paved.[9][10] By 1983, the highway was decommissioned and given to local authority.[21][13] SR 300 was reused as a renumbering of part of SR 257 and all of SR 333. Note that SR 333 would be reused on an unrelated route in 1993.


CountyLocationmi[53]kmDestinationsNotes
JasperMonticello0.00.0  SR 83 (Madison Street) – Forsyth, MadisonWestern terminus
PutnamOconee National Forest10.516.9  SR 142 (Shady Dale Road NW) – Willard, Shady Dale
20.332.7    US 129 / US 441 / SR 24 (Madison Road)Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 304 edit

 

State Route 304

LocationColumbia County
Length6 mi[citation needed] (9.7 km)
Existed1957[7][8]–1987[34][48]

State Route 304 (SR 304) was a north–south state highway that was located in the east-central part of the state. It was completely within Columbia County. Between June 1955 and July 1957, it was established from US 221/SR 47 just north of Appling north-northeast to US 221/SR 104/SR 150 in Pollards Corner. It was completely concurrent with US 221. The entire length of US 221/SR 304 was paved.[7][8] In 1987, SR 47 between Appling and Leah was shifted eastward to travel concurrently with US 221. This necessitated a decommissioning of SR 304.[34][48]

State Route 312 edit

 

State Route 312

LocationBainbridgeWhigham
Length15.4 mi[citation needed] (24.8 km)
Existed1960[8][32]–1980[35][36]

State Route 312 (SR 312) was an east–west state highway that was located in the southwestern part of the state. Between July 1957 and June 1960, it was established from US 27 Bus./US 84 Bus./SR 38 in Bainbridge to US 84/SR 38 in Whigham.[8][32] The portion of SR 312 from Bainbridge to SR 262 north-northeast of Climax was paved. From that point to Whigham had a "topsoil or gravel, unpaved" surface.[8][32] By the middle of 1963, the eastern part of the highway was also paved.[32][19] In 1980, SR 312 was decommissioned.[35][36]

State Route 318 edit

 

State Route 318

LocationDawson County
Length6.351 mi[54] (10.221 km)
Existed1960[8][32]–1985[4][5]

State Route 318 (SR 318) was a west–east state highway that existed in the north-central part of the state. It traveled completely within Dawson County. Between July 1957 and June 1960, it was established from the Dawson Demonstration Forest and Wildlife Management Area south-southwest of Dawsonville to SR 53 southeast of that city. The entire length of the highway was paved.[8][32] By the middle of 1963, it was extended south-southeast on a concurrency with SR 53, then solely east and southeast to War Hill Park northeast of Chestatee.[32][19] In 1971, the western terminus was truncated to SR 9 south of Dawsonville.[10][55] In 1980, the eastern terminus was truncated to SR 53.[35][36] In 1985, SR 318 was decommissioned.[4][5]

State Route 319 edit

 

State Route 319

LocationBarrow and Jackson counties
Existed1960[8][32]–1990[56][57]

State Route 319 (SR 319) was a state highway that existed in the north-central part of the state. It traversed the northeastern part of Barrow County and the south-central part of Jackson County. Between July 1957 and June 1960, it was established from SR 211 north-northwest of Statham to US 129/SR 24 about halfway between Arcade and Jefferson.[8][32] The entire highway was paved at this time.[8][32] The highway was virtually unchanged for the next 30 years. In 1990, it was decommissioned.[56][57]

State Route 321 edit

 

State Route 321

LocationBryan and Bulloch counties
Existed1960[8][32]–1967[47][37]

State Route 321 (SR 321) was a short-lived state highway that existed in the eastern part of the state. It traversed the northwestern part of Bryan County and the southeastern part of Bulloch County. Between July 1957 and June 1960, it was established from US 280/SR 30/SR 63 in Pembroke north-northeast to SR 119 west-northwest of Blitchton.[8][32] The entire Bryan County portion was paved, while the entire Bulloch County portion had a "topsoil or gravel, unpaved" surface.[8][32] By the middle of 1963, the Bulloch County portion was paved. SR 321 was designated on a separate segment from US 80/SR 26 south-southeast of Stilson, then northeast and north-northwest to SR 119 southwest of Guyton. From the southern terminus of this segment to the turn to the north-northwest had a topsoil or gravel, unpaved surface; while the rest of it was paved. There was no indication if the two segments were connected via concurrencies with SR 119 and US 80/SR 26 or if they were two separate segments.[32][19] By the end of 1966, SR 119's segment at the northern terminus of the original segment was redesignated as part of SR 46. SR 321's southern segment was extended on a direct connection with the newer segment. The central portion of the newer segment was hard surfaced.[19][20] In 1967, SR 119 was re-routed southward, replacing all of SR 321. The former path of SR 119 through Stilson was redesignated as SR 119 Conn.[47][37]

State Route 322 edit

 

State Route 322

LocationEmanuelToombs counties
Existed1960[8][32]–1966[19][20]

State Route 322 (SR 322) was a state highway in the central part of the state. Between 1957 and the end of 1960, it was established from US 1/SR 4/SR 46 in Oak Park then south-southeast to SR 292 east of Lyons.[8][32] In the middle of the 1960s, its entire length was redesignated as an eastern extension of SR 86.[19][20]

State Route 333 (1963–1982) edit

 

State Route 333

LocationThomas, Mitchell, Dougherty, Lamar, Pike, Spalding, Henry, and Clayton counties
Existed1963[32][19]–1982[21][13]

State Route 333 (SR 333) was a north–south state highway that existed in two separate segments in the state. The highway traversed portions of Thomas, Mitchell, Dougherty, Lamar, Pike, Spalding, Henry, and Clayton counties.

Between June 1960 and June 1963, the highway was established on US 19 from the Florida state line to Camilla. This truncated SR 35, which was concurrent with US 19 from the Florida state line to Thomasville. The segment of US 19 between Thomasville and Meigs, with which SR 3 was concurrent was redesignated as US 19 Bus. SR 333 was established on a sole routing from Camilla to the eastern part of Albany, while US 19/SR 3 traveled on a slightly more western path. SR 333 was also established on US 19/US 41 from SR 16 in Griffin to an indeterminate location between Jonesboro and Hapeville. From Griffin to Lovejoy and in Jonesboro, SR 3 traveled on a more eastern path. Between Lovejoy and Jonesboro and from north-northwest of Jonesboro, US 19/US 41/SR 3/SR 333 traveled concurrently.[32][19] By 1966, US 19 between Camilla and Albany was shifted eastward to travel concurrently with SR 333. It was unclear if the northern terminus of SR 333 was truncated to Lovejoy or not.[19][20] That year, SR 333 was indicated to be "projected mileage" from an unnumbered road in the southern part of Barnesville, then west-northwest and north-northwest through Aldora, then north-northeast past US 41/SR 7, then north-northwest through Milner, then northwest and north-northwest past US 19/SR 3 south of Griffin, then north-northwest through the western part of Griffin to connect with the US 19/US 41/SR 3/SR 333 intersection with SR 92 in the northern part of the city.[20][47] The next year, US 341's path through the Barnesville–Aldora area was shifted southwestward to travel concurrently with SR 333 from just south of Barnesville to US 41/SR 7 Conn. just north of the city. SR 333 was indicated to be projected mileage and under construction from this intersection to the US 19/US 41/SR 3/SR 92/SR 333 intersection in Griffin.[47][37] In 1968, the highway was indicated to be projected mileage from the US 19/US 82/SR 50S/SR 333 and US 19/SR 3W intersections in Albany. The under construction segment from just north of Barnesville to south of Griffin was completed.[37][33] The next year, the portion of SR 333 from just north of Barnesville to Griffin was decommissioned.[33][9]

In 1970, all of SR 333 north of Griffin was also decommissioned.[9][10] In 1974, a freeway was built in Albany, with SR 333 designated on it.[58][41] Three years later, US 19 through the main part of Albany was shifted northeast to travel concurrently with the SR 333 freeway.[17][18] By March 1980, US 82 in Albany was also shifted onto the freeway.[46][35] Later that year, the northern terminus of SR 333 was truncated to the US 19/US 19 Bus./US 82/US 82 Bus./SR 50/SR 50 Bus./SR 62/SR 333 interchange in Albany, with SR 50 shifted onto the freeway.[35][36] In 1982, all of SR 333 that remained was redesignated as SR 300.[21][13] SR 333 was reused in 1993 for part of the old alignment of SR 33, which was rerouted over part of SR 133. SR 133 took over part of the old alignment of SR 33 and took over a portion of SR 94.

State Route 333 Spur edit

 

State Route 333 Spur

LocationAlbany
Existed1976–1980

State Route 333 Spur (SR 333 Spur) was a proposed spur route of SR 333 that was planned to be put inside the city limits of Albany. In 1976, it was indicated to be "projected mileage" from the SR 333 freeway just north of the Clark Avenue interchange and northeast to Turner Field Road.[42][17] In 1980, it was deleted, never having been built.[46][35]

State Route 336 edit

 

State Route 336

LocationStephens County
Existed1960[32][19]–1982[21][13]

State Route 336 (SR 336) was a state highway that existed in the northeastern part of the state. On October 28, 1960, it was established from SR 328 east of Avalon to SR 17 in the southeastern part of Toccoa. The entire highway was paved.[32][19] On November 29, 1982, the highway was decommissioned.[21][13] It is locally known as Rock Creek Road, formerly Brookhaven Circle.

State Route 340 edit

 

State Route 340

LocationAustellFair Oaks
Existed1963[32][19]–1983[13][4]

State Route 340 (SR 340) was a state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area. It traversed the northeastern part of Douglas County and the south-central part of Cobb County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 340 was established in 1952 as an unnumbered road from US 78/SR 8 in Austell to SR 3 in Fair Oaks.[39][30] Between June 1960 and June 1963, this road was designated as SR 340. The entire length of the highway was paved.[32][19] In 1983, SR 5 was re-routed on a more southerly track, replacing all of SR 340.[13][4]

State Route 342 edit

 

State Route 342

LocationDawson County
Length5.240 mi[54] (8.433 km)
Existed1963[32][19]–1982[21][13]

State Route 342 (SR 342) was a 5.240-mile-long (8.433 km) state highway that existed in the north-central part of the state. It was completely within Dawson County. On March 28, 1961, it was established from SR 183 southeast of Juno to SR 52 southeast of Amicalola, on the southern edge of the Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest. The entire highway was paved.[32][19] On January 18, 1982, it was decommissioned.[21][13] It is today known as Keith Evans Road from SR 183 to SR 136 and Bailey/Waters Rd from SR 136 to SR 52.

State Route 343 edit

 

State Route 343

LocationTallulah FallsWiley
Existed1963[32][19]–1965[19][20]

State Route 343 (SR 343) was a short-lived state highway that existed in the northeastern part of the state. It was completely within Rabun County. Between June 1960 and June 1963, it was established on a concurrency with US 23, US 441, and possibly SR 15 from Tallulah Falls and Wiley. The entire path of this concurrency was paved.[32][19] By the end of 1965, it was decommissioned, with US 23/US 441/SR 15 all traveling on SR 343's former path.[19][20] The only part today that is not part of US 23/441 is Wylie Connector, which was used as the temporary transition from the new route to the original routing.

State Route 344 edit

 

State Route 344

LocationRomeCartersville
Existed1963[32][19]–1977[17][18]

State Route 344 (SR 344) was a state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state. It traversed portions of Floyd and Bartow counties.

The highway that would eventually become SR 344 was established at least as early as 1919 as part of SR 4 from Rome to Cartersville.[59] By the end of 1926, a portion of the highway from just east of Rome to a point northwest of Cartersville was under construction. In the northwestern part of Cartersville and farther to the west, a portion of the highway had a "completed semi hard surface".[22][23] Within three years, the segment of SR 4 was redesignated as part of SR 20, with US 41W designated on it. The portion of the highway just east of Rome had a "completed hard surface". The highway was under construction northwest of Cartersville.[23][60]

By the middle of 1930, the entire Rome–Cartersville segment had a completed hard surface.[60][24] Before the end of 1934, US 41W between Rome and Cartersville was redesignated as part of US 411.[61][62] In 1953, a small portion of SR 20 in the northern part of Cartersville was hard surfaced.[30][31] A few years later, all portions of SR 20 that had been built were paved.[7][8] Between 1960 and 1963, US 411 between Rome and Cartersville was shifted on a more southerly routing, concurrent with SR 344, which was commissioned at this time; SR 20 remained on the old alignment.[32][19] In 1977, SR 344 was decommissioned, and SR 20 was shifted onto US 411 between Rome and Cartersville. SR 20's old alignment was redesignated as part of SR 293.[17][18]

State Route 345 edit

 

State Route 345

LocationCatoosa and Floyd Counties
ExistedSeptember 1962[63]–December 1962

State Route 345 (SR 345) was a state highway that was assigned to what is now SR 100 from SR 20 west of Coosa to SR 114 in Summerville in Catoosa and Floyd counties. It existed from September 1962 to December 12, 1962.[64]

State Route 346 edit

 

State Route 346

LocationJackson County
Length5.36 mi[65] (8.63 km)
Existed1963[32][19]–2004[66][67]

State Route 346 (SR 346) was a short east–west state highway that existed in the north-central part of the state. It was completely within Jackson County. Between June 1960 and June 1963, it was established from US 129/SR 11 in Talmo to SR 82 Spur northeast of the city. the entire highway was paved.[32][19] In 1966, SR 82 Spur and SR 82 swapped paths in the area.[20][47] In 2004, SR 346 was decommissioned.[66][67]

State Route 349 edit

 

State Route 349

LocationFlintstoneRossville
Existed1963[32][19]–1986[5][34]

State Route 349 (SR 349) was an east–west state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state. It traveled entirely within the northern part of Walker County. Between June 1960 and June 1963, it was established from SR 193 in Flintstone to US 27/SR 1 in Rossville.[32][19] In 1986, it was decommissioned.[5][34]

State Route 350 edit

 

State Route 350

LocationAthens
Existed1963[32][19]–1966[20][47]

State Route 350 (SR 350) was a state highway that existed in the Athens – Clarke County metropolitan area. It was entirely in Clarke County and the city limits of Athens. Between June 1960 and June 1963, it was established from US 129/SR 15 in the northwestern part of the city to US 29/SR 8 in the northeastern part. The entire divided highway was paved.[32][19] By the end of 1965, US 29 was designated on SR 350 from the US 129/SR 15 interchange, which also has US 29 Temp. and US 441 Temp., to the US 29/SR 8 interchange. US 441 Temp. was designated on it from the US 129/SR 15 interchange to the US 441/SR 15 Alt. interchange. A western extension of SR 350, ending at US 29/US 78/SR 8/SR 10, was under construction. Also, SR 350 was under construction east-southeast just slightly from the US 29/SR 8 interchange.[19][20] In 1966, SR 350 was decommissioned. US 29 was designated on the freeway from the western terminus to where it, as well as SR 8, depart the freeway. This interchange also had SR 8 Bus. and SR 106. SR 8 was designated on the entire length of the freeway. Its former path through the city was redesignated as SR 8 Bus., still concurrent with US 78/SR 10.[20][47]

State Route 351 edit

 

State Route 351

LocationClayton and Henry counties
Length13 mi[68] (21 km)
Existed1963[32][19]–1985[4][5]

State Route 351 (SR 351) was a 13-mile-long (21 km) state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area. It traversed portions of Clayton and Henry counties. Between September 1953 and June 1954, the roadway that would eventually become SR 351 was established as an unnumbered road from SR 138 in Jonesboro to US 23/SR 42 east-northeast of Flippen.[31][6] Between June 1960 and June 1963 SR 351 was designated on this road.[32][19] In 1985, it was decommissioned.[4][5]

State Route 353 edit

 

State Route 353

LocationCoffee, Irwin, and Ben Hill counties
Existed1965[19][20]–1988[48][69]

State Route 353 (SR 353) was a north–south state highway that was located in the south-central part of the state. It traversed the northwest portion of Coffee County, the extreme northeastern part of Irwin County, and the southeastern part of Ben Hill County. Between June 1960 and June 1963, the roadway that would eventually become SR 353 was established as an unnumbered road built from SR 158 west of Douglas, then north and northwest to SR 268 west-southwest of Broxton.[32][19] By the end of 1965, SR 353 was designated on this road and extended northwest to the Coffee–Irwin county line.[19][20] In 1966, SR 353 was proposed to be extended northwest to SR 206 north-northeast of Wray in the southeastern part of Ben Hill County.[20][47] In 1973, the highway was extended on this planned path.[70][58] In 1980, it was extended south-southeast around the southwestern part of Douglas to SR 135.[46][35] In 1988, SR 206 was shifted southeast, replacing all of SR 353.[48][69] The old route of SR 206 later became SR 706.

State Route 357 edit

 

State Route 357

LocationColumbus
Length15.5 mi[citation needed] (24.9 km)
Existed1965[19][20]–1983[13][4]

State Route 357 (SR 357) was a 15.5-mile-long (24.9 km) north–south state highway that was located in the west-central part of the state. It was completely within Muscogee County and the city limits of Columbus. In April 1932, the roadway that would eventually become SR 357 was built as an unnumbered road from the main part of Columbus east to the western edge of Fort Benning.[71][72] Later that year, SR 103 was designated on this road, with a "completed hard surface".[72][73] In 1952, an unnumbered road was built from SR 103 in the eastern part of Columbus north-northwest to US 27 Alt./SR 85.[39][30] Between June 1963 and the end of 1965, SR 103's southern terminus was truncated to Buena Vista Road and Brennan Road in the main part of Columbus. Its former path on Buena Vista Road was redesignated as SR 357. The unnumbered road built a decade before was also numbered as part of SR 357.[19][20] In 1969, SR 357 was extended south-southwest to SR 85 south of Columbus (now within Fort Benning). This extension replaced SR 1 Spur.[33][9] In 1983, SR 357 was decommissioned.[13][4]

State Route 359 edit

 

State Route 359

LocationChatham County
Existed1965[19][20]–1968[37][33]

State Route 359 (SR 359) was a short lived state highway that existed completely within Chatham County, mostly within the city limits of Savannah. Between June 1963 and the end of 1965, it was established from just north of Hunter Air Force Base south of the city to US 17/US 80/SR 25/SR 26S in downtown, traveling on Abercorn Street and 37th Street.[19][20] In 1968, the entire highway was redesignated as part of SR 204.[37][33]

State Route 361 edit

 

State Route 361

LocationBibb County
Length21 mi[citation needed] (34 km)
Existed1967[47][37]–1982[21][13]

State Route 361 (SR 361) was a north–south state highway that was located in the central part of the state. It was completely within Bibb County, mostly in the city limits of Macon. Between June 1963 and the end of 1966, the roadway that would eventually become SR 361 was built as Hartley Bridge Road and Mt. Pleasant Church Road south of Macon.[19][20] In 1967, SR 361 was established from US 41/SR 49/SR 247 south of Macon, west on Hartley Bridge Road and Mt. Pleasant Church Road, then north-northeast on Fulton Mill Road, Heath Road, Tucker Road, and Foster Road, and then northeast on Bass Road to SR 87 east-southeast of Bolingbroke.[47][37] In 1972, US 23 was shifted onto SR 87.[10][55] In 1976, US 129 onto US 41/SR 49/SR 247 south of Macon.[42][17] In 1982, SR 361 was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 363 edit

 

State Route 363

LocationSaffoldBlakely
Length19 mi[citation needed] (31 km)
Existed1967[47][37]–1985[4][5]

State Route 363 (SR 363) was a north–south state highway that was located in the southwestern part of the state. It was completely within Early County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 363 was built in 1952 as an unnumbered road from US 84/SR 38 in Saffold to SR 39 in the southern part of Blakely.[39][30] The next year, the northern terminus of this road was shifted to SR 62 in the western part of Blakely.[30][31] In 1966, the northern terminus was shifted back to its original location.[20][47] In 1967, SR 363 was designated on this road.[47][37] In 1985, all of SR 363 except for the southern piece was decommissioned. This southern portion was redesignated as part of SR 370.[4][5]

State Route 363 Spur edit

 

State Route 363 Spur

LocationEarly County
Existed1967[47][37]–1985[4][5]

State Route 363 Spur (SR 363 Spur) was a spur route of SR 363 that existed entirely in the southwestern part of Early County. Between June 1963 and the end of 1966, an unnumbered road was built west-southwest from Cedar Springs.[19][20] In 1967, SR 363 Spur was designated on this road.[47][37] In 1985, when SR 363 and SR 363 Spur were decommissioned, SR 273 was extended west-southwest of Cedar Springs. This replaced the eastern part of SR 363 Spur. What was the western part was redesignated as SR 273 Spur.[4][5]

State Route 364 edit

 

State Route 364

LocationThomas and Brooks counties
Existed1966[20][47]–1982[21][13]

State Route 364 (SR 364) was an east–west state highway that was located in the southern part of the state. It traversed portions of Thomas and Brooks counties. In 1966, it was established from US 84/SR 38 west of Boston to US 84/SR 38 west of Quitman. Its entire length was hard surfaced.[20][47] In 1982, it was decommissioned.[21][13]

State Route 366 edit

 

State Route 366

LocationHart County
Length10 mi[citation needed] (16 km)
Existed1967[47][37]–1990[56][57]

State Route 366 (SR 366) was a north–south state highway that was located in the northeastern part of the state. It was completely within Hart County. In 1967, it was established from an intersection with SR 51 and SR 77 west of Hartwell, then northwest on a concurrency with SR 77 and solely north-northwest to Interstate 85 (I-85) northeast of Lavonia and just south of Tugaloo State Park. The entire highway was hard surfaced.[47][37] In 1990, SR 77's path in the Lavonia area was shifted northeast, replacing all of SR 366. Its former path was redesignated as SR 77 Conn.[56][57]

State Route 367 edit

 

State Route 367

LocationWhitemarsh IslandWilmington Island
Existed1969[33][9]–1985[4][5]

State Route 367 (SR 367) was an east–west state highway that was located in the east-central part of the state. It was completely within Chatham County in the Savannah metropolitan area. Between June 1963 and the end of 1965, SR 26 Loop was established from US 80/SR 26 in Whitemarsh Island, then southeast over Turner Creek, then northeast and north-northeast to US 80/SR 26 in Wilmington Island. Its entire length was hard surfaced.[19][20] In 1969, it was redesignated as SR 367.[33][9] In 1985, it was decommissioned.[4][5]

State Route 371 edit

 

State Route 371

LocationForsyth County
Length6 mi[74] (9.7 km)
Existed1971[10][55]–2020[75]

State Route 371 (SR 371), locally known as Post Road, was a north–south state highway that was located in Forsyth County. On June 8, 1971, it was established along part of what had been SR 141 a little after a year after SR 369 replaced what had been a disconnected part of SR 141. After US 19 was moved to SR 400 in 1981, it became mostly a local farm-to-market road, and its continued existence as a state route was a relic. After widening and reconstruction of nearby Bethelview Road was completed in 2019, SR 141 was extended in early 2020 along Bethelview Road to SR 20. As a nearly mile-for-mile swap, SR 371 subsequently was transferred to local control in 2020.[76]

State Route 373 edit

 

State Route 373

LocationGordon County
Existed1972[55][70]–1977[17][18]

State Route 373 (SR 373) was an east–west state highway that was located in the northwestern part of the state. It was completely within Gordon County. Between June 1963 and the end of 1965, the roadways that would eventually become SR 373 were built as unnumbered roads. One extended from Calhoun to Cash. The other extended from Cash to SR 53 in Sonoraville.[19][20] In 1972, SR 373 was designated on both of these roads, starting at SR 156 in Calhoun.[55][70] In 1977, it was decommissioned.[17][18]

State Route 375 edit

 

State Route 375

LocationQuitman and Stewart counties
Existed1972[55][77]–1972[55][70]

State Route 375 (SR 375) was a very short-lived state highway that existed in the west-central part of the state. It traversed portions of Quitman and Stewart counties. Between June 1963 and the end of 1965, the roadway that would eventually become SR 375 was built as an unnumbered road from Florence north-northeast to Omaha, and then eastward to US 27/SR 1 south-southeast of Louvale.[19][20] In 1968, this road was extended south-southwest to SR 27 in Georgetown.[37][33] In early 1972, this road was designated as SR 375.[55][77] Later that year, it was redesignated as a northern extension of SR 39.[55][70]

State Route 375 Connector edit

 

State Route 375 Connector

LocationFlorenceLumpkin
Existed1972[55][77]–1972[55][70]

State Route 375 Connector (SR 375 Conn.) was a connector route of SR 375 that existed entirely in Stewart County in the west-central part of the state. In 1970, the roadway that would eventually become SR 375 Conn. was built as an unnumbered road from Florence to US 27/SR 1 in Lumpkin.[9][10] In early 1972, this road was designated as SR 375 Conn.[55][77] Later that year, it was redesignated as SR 39 Conn.[55][70]

State Route 379 edit

 

State Route 379

LocationPickens County
Existed1977[17][18]–1981[36][21]

State Route 379 (SR 379) was a short-lived east–west state highway that was located in the north-central part of the state. It was completely within Pickens County. The roadway that would eventually become SR 379 was established in 1941 as an eastern segment of SR 143 from SR 53 east of Fairmount to SR 5 and SR 53 in Tate.[78][16] By the end of 1946, the eastern half of this segment had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface. The western half of it was indicated to be "projected mileage".[2][3]

By the end of 1960, nearly the entire part of this highway west of the SR 156 intersection was decommissioned.[8][32] By the end of 1963, this decommissioned part was re-instated.[32][19] In 1970, a portion of it southeast of the SR 53 intersection was hard surfaced.[9][10] In 1973, this portion was indicated to be "under construction or projected mileage".[70][58] In 1977, all of SR 143 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.[17][18] In 1981, SR 379 was decommissioned.[36][21]

State Route 381 edit

 

State Route 381

LocationDallas–Cross Roads
Existed1979[46][35]–1990[56][57]

State Route 381 (SR 381) was a north–south state highway located in Paulding County in the northwestern part of the state. The roadway that would eventually become SR 381 was built in 1939, when SR 92 was extended from Hiram to Acworth.[79] By the end of 1948, the entire length of SR 92 that would become SR 381 was hard surfaced.[2][3] In 1966, the DallasNew Hope segment of SR 92 was shifted to the southeast. Its old alignment became SR 92 Spur.[20][47] In 1972, the Hiram–New Hope segment of SR 92 was shifted east. Its old alignment between New Hope and Cross Roads became a northeast extension of SR 92 Spur.[55][70] In 1979, SR 92 Spur was redesignated as SR 381.[46][35] In 1990, SR 381 was decommissioned.[56][57]

State Route 387 edit

 

State Route 387

LocationEast PointCollege Park
Length2.9 mi[80] (4.7 km)
Existed1990[56][57]–1991[57][81]

State Route 387 (SR 387) was a very short-lived state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area. It traversed portions of Fulton and Clayton counties. In 1990, it was established on Camp Creek Parkway from Interstate 285 (I-285) in East Point to I-85 in College Park.[56][57] The next year, it was decommissioned.[57][81]

Junctions

CountyLocationmi[80]kmDestinationsNotes
FultonEast Point0.00.0  I-285Western terminus; I-285 exit 3
Clayton
No major junctions
FultonCollege Park2.84.5    US 29 / SR 14 / SR 139 (Main Street)
FultonClayton
county line
2.94.7  I-85 – ColumbusEastern terminus; I-85 exit 18A
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

State Route 407 Loop edit

 

State Route 407 Loop

LocationSandy Springs
Existed1990[56]–1994[51]

State Route 407 Loop (SR 407 Loop) was a loop route of SR 407, an unsigned designation along Interstate 285 (I-285; similar to SR 404 Spur in Savannah). It traveled off I-285 (now Glenridge Drive), and then turned left onto Dunwoody–Peachtree Road by Saint Joseph's Hospital of Atlanta to I-285 (SR 407) once again. The route was officially removed in 1994.[51]

Routes 400-422 edit

These are not considered former, but decommissioned because they are either interstate or major freeway.

Number Length (mi) Length (km) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes
  SR 400 53.7 86.4 I-85 / SR 403 in Atlanta US 19 / SR 60 / SR 115 south-southeast of Dahlonega 01971-01-011971[10][55] current An unbuilt portion south of I-85 to what is now Freedom Parkway was originally planned to be part of I-485
  SR 401 355.11 571.49 I-75 / SR 93 at the Florida state line south-southeast of Lake Park I-75 at the Tennessee state line at East Ridge Unsigned designation for I-75
  SR 402 202.61 326.07 I-20 at the Alabama state line southwest of Tallapoosa I-20 at the South Carolina state line at Augusta Unsigned designation for I-20
  SR 403 179.9 289.5 I-85 at the Alabama state line at Lanett I-85 at the South Carolina state line east-southeast of Gumlog Unsigned designation for I-85
  SR 404 166.81 268.45 I-16 / I-75 / SR 401 in Macon I-16 and Montgomery Street in Savannah Unsigned designation for I-16
  SR 405 112.03 180.29 I-95 / SR 9 at the Florida state line south of Kingsland I-95 at the South Carolina state line north-northeast of Port Wentworth Unsigned designation for I-95
  SR 406 19.5 31.4 I-59 at the Alabama state line south-southwest of Rising Fawn I-24 / I-59 / SR 409 west-northwest of Wildwood Unsigned designation for I-59
  SR 407 63.98 102.97 Beltway around Atlanta Unsigned designation for I-285
  SR 408 15.83 25.48 I-75 / I-475 / SR 401 south-southwest of Macon I-75 / I-475 / SR 401 northwest of Bolingbroke Unsigned designation for I-475
  SR 409 4.13 6.65 I-24 at the Tennessee state line west-northwest of Wildwood I-24 at the Tennessee state line at Chattanooga Unsigned designation for I-24
  SR 410 6.8 10.9 US 29 / US 78 / SR 8 / Stone Mountain Freeway on the ScottdaleNorth Decatur line US 78 / SR 10 / Stone Mountain Freeway north of Stone Mountain State highway designation for the Stone Mountain Freeway; entirely concurrent with US 78
  SR 411 49.30 79.34 I-185 and Lindsey Creek Parkway in Fort Benning in Columbus I-85 / I-185 / SR 403 east of LaGrange Unsigned designation for I-185
  SR 412 Albany I-75 / I-175 / SR 401 near Cordele Unsigned designation for what would have become I-175, had it actually been built
  SR 413 11.04 17.77 I-75 / I-675 / SR 401 in Stockbridge I-285 / I-675 / SR 407 south-southeast of Atlanta Unsigned designation for I-675
  SR 414 5.40 8.69 I-285 / I-420 / SR 407 in Atlanta I-420 / I-675 / SR 413 in Atlanta Unsigned designation for what would have become I-420, had it actually been built
  SR 415 15.62 25.14 I-20 / I-520 / SR 232 / SR 402 in Augusta I-520 at the South Carolina state line on the AugustaNorth Augusta line Unsigned designation for I-520
  SR 416
  SR 417 30.97 49.84 I-75 / I-575 / SR 5 / SR 401 southeast of Kennesaw I-575 / SR 5 / SR 5 Bus. / SR 372 / SR 515 west of Nelson Unsigned designation for I-575
  SR 419 25.01 40.25 I-85 / I-985 / SR 365 / SR 403 in Suwanee I-985 / US 23 / SR 365 in Gainesville Unsigned designation for I-985; completely concurrent with SR 365
  SR 421 6.49 10.44 I-516 / SR 21 in Garden City I-516 / SR 21 in Savannah Unsigned designation for I-516; completely concurrent with SR 21
  SR 422 19.1 30.7 Beltway around Athens Unsigned designation for SR 10 Loop
  •       Former
  •       Proposed and unbuilt

References edit

  1. ^ a b Google (June 19, 2013). "Overview map of SR 204 Spur" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 19, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y State Highway Department of Georgia (1946). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 14, 2017. (Corrected to November 7, 1946.)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag State Highway Department of Georgia (1948). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 15, 2017. (Corrected to February 28, 1948.)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Georgia Department of Transportation (1984). Official Highway and Transportation Map (PDF) (Map) (1984–1985 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Georgia Department of Transportation (1986). Official Highway and Transportation Map (PDF) (Map) (1986–1987 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m State Highway Department of Georgia (1954). State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 14, 2017. (Corrected to June 1, 1954.)
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y State Highway Department of Georgia (1955). State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 14, 2017. (Corrected to June 1, 1955.)
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as State Highway Department of Georgia (1957). State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 18, 2017. (Corrected to July 1, 1957.)
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1970). Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1971). Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1, 1942). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1, 1943). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Georgia Department of Transportation (1983). Official Highway and Transportation Map (PDF) (Map) (1983–1984 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 1, 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1, 1944). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1, 1945). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  16. ^ a b c d e f State Highway Department of Georgia (July 1, 1941). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Georgia Department of Transportation (January 1977). Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map) (1977–1978 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Georgia Department of Transportation (January 1977). Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map) (1977–1978 ed.). Scale not given. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 24, 2017.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq State Highway Department of Georgia (1963). State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. OCLC 5673161. Retrieved March 18, 2017. (Corrected to June 1, 1963.)
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at State Highway Department of Georgia (January 1966). Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai
list, former, state, routes, georgia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, list, former, state, routes, g. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources List of former state routes in Georgia 200 699 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message 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 SystemInterstate US State Special Contents 1 State Route 204 Spur 2 State Route 205 3 State Route 207 4 State Route 209 5 State Route 210 6 State Route 213 6 1 State Route 213 Spur 7 State Route 214 7 1 State Route 214 Bypass 7 2 State Route 214 Spur 8 State Route 217 9 State Route 218 10 State Route 221 11 State Route 222 12 State Route 226 13 State Route 229 14 State Route 235 15 State Route 238 16 State Route 239 17 State Route 243 18 State Route 244 19 State Route 245 20 State Route 248 21 State Route 249 22 State Route 250 23 State Route 258 24 State Route 259 25 State Route 261 26 State Route 263 27 State Route 265 28 State Route 267 29 State Route 269 30 State Route 276 31 State Route 277 32 State Route 287 33 State Route 289 34 State Route 290 35 State Route 291 36 State Route 294 37 State Route 294N 38 State Route 294S 39 State Route 295 40 State Route 300 1959 1982 41 State Route 304 42 State Route 312 43 State Route 318 44 State Route 319 45 State Route 321 46 State Route 322 47 State Route 333 1963 1982 47 1 State Route 333 Spur 48 State Route 336 49 State Route 340 50 State Route 342 51 State Route 343 52 State Route 344 53 State Route 345 54 State Route 346 55 State Route 349 56 State Route 350 57 State Route 351 58 State Route 353 59 State Route 357 60 State Route 359 61 State Route 361 62 State Route 363 62 1 State Route 363 Spur 63 State Route 364 64 State Route 366 65 State Route 367 66 State Route 371 67 State Route 373 68 State Route 375 68 1 State Route 375 Connector 69 State Route 379 70 State Route 381 71 State Route 387 72 State Route 407 Loop 73 Routes 400 422 74 References 75 External linksState Route 204 Spur edit nbsp State Route 204 SpurLocationSavannahLength7 2 mi 1 11 6 km Existed1989 2020Main article Georgia State Route 204 Spur Savannah State Route 204 Spur SR 204 Spur was a spur route of SR 204 that connected the mainline to Skidaway Island Segments of SR 204 Spur are named Montgomery Cross Road Waters Avenue Whitfield Avenue Diamond Causeway and Tidewater Way 1 SR 204 Spur was turned over to local control in February 2020 as part of the deal with the Georgia Department of Transportation that extended SR 17 onto the Jimmy DeLoach Parkway and truncated the eastern terminus of SR 204 to SR 21 State Route 205 edit nbsp State Route 205LocationCherokee CountyExisted1948 2 3 1985 4 5 State Route 205 SR 205 was a state highway that existed in the north central part of the state It was assigned to Bells Ferry Road in Cherokee County Between 1946 and the end of 1948 it was established between SR 92 at a point southwest of Canton and SR 5 in the city 2 3 By the middle of 1955 all of the highway except for the southern terminus was hard surfaced The portion at the southern terminus had completed grading but was not surfaced 6 7 About two years later this southern part was paved 7 8 In 1970 SR 92 s segment between Acworth and Woodstock was shifted southward and SR 205 was extended southward on SR 92 s old alignment to SR 92 s new path 9 10 In 1985 it was decommissioned 4 5 State Route 207 edit nbsp State Route 207LocationOconee CountyLength2 1 mi citation needed 3 4 km Existed1942 11 12 1983 13 4 State Route 207 SR 207 was a 2 1 mile long 3 4 km state highway that existed in the central part of the state completely within Oconee County It is now known as Hog Mountain Road In 1942 SR 207 was established from SR 53 west northwest of Watkinsville to US 129 SR 15 SR 24 north northeast of the city Its entire length was indicated to be on system not marked or maintained 11 12 The next year the entire highway had a completed hard surface 12 14 In 1983 it was decommissioned 13 4 State Route 209 edit nbsp State Route 209LocationOconee CountyExisted1942 11 12 1983 13 4 State Route 209 SR 209 was a state highway in the Athens area It existed entirely within Oconee County In 1942 it was established from US 78 SR 10 southwest of Bogart north northwest to US 29 SR 8 in Bogart and then northeast to the Oconee Clarke county line This northern terminus was just south southeast of the Oconee Clarke Barrow Jackson county quadripoint The entire length of the highway was indicated to be on system not marked or maintained 11 12 The next year the southern half of the highway had a completed hard surface 12 14 By the end of 1946 the southern terminus was shifted to another intersection with US 78 SR 10 but at a point south southeast of Bogart The entire length of this new part was hard surfaced The northern terminus was truncated to the US 29 SR 8 intersection in Bogart 15 2 In 1983 SR 209 was decommissioned 13 4 State Route 210 edit nbsp State Route 210LocationLookout MountainExisted1941 16 11 1977 17 18 State Route 210 SR 210 was a very short state highway that was located in Lookout Mountain At the end of 1941 it was established from SR 157 and SR 193 just west of the city limits of Lookout Mountain and then east and northeast to the Tennessee state line at the Chattanooga city limits 16 11 The next year the entire length of the highway had a completed hard surface 11 12 Between 1955 and the middle of 1957 it was shifted to a different alignment It traveled from SR 157 northwest to the Tennessee state line at the Lookout Mountain city limits This new alignment was paved 7 8 Between 1963 and 1966 the northern terminus was shifted slightly to the east The highway then traveled on a south southwest to north northeast direction 19 20 In 1977 SR 210 was redesignated as part of SR 189 17 18 State Route 213 edit nbsp State Route 213LocationWalton Newton Jasper Morgan countiesExisted1941 16 11 1982 21 13 State Route 213 SR 213 was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state It traversed parts of Walton Newton Jasper and Morgan counties The roadway that would eventually become SR 213 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 Its entire length had a sand clay or top soil surface 22 23 In 1930 it was designated as SR 60 24 25 In 1937 part of SR 142 was established on a path from Farrar to Newborn 26 27 At the end of 1940 SR 60 was redesignated as SR 181 The segment of SR 142 was under construction 28 29 At the end of the next year SR 181 was redesignated as SR 213 16 11 In 1942 SR 142 s segment had completed grading but was not surfaced 11 12 The next year SR 213 was designated on a southern segment It extended from SR 36 south southwest of Covington then southeast and east to SR 11 in Mansfield It may have also been designated from Mansfield east northeast to SR 142 in Newborn and then north northwest to SR 12 east of Covington however these segments were not specifically designated on maps The SR 142 segment had a sand clay or top soil surface 12 14 By the end of 1946 the northern segment of SR 213 was redesignated as SR 229 which was also designated on the segment of roadway from Newborn to east of Covington The Mansfield Newborn segment of SR 213 was hard surfaced 15 2 By the end of 1948 SR 213 was extended east southeast from Newborn to SR 83 in Pennington From its western terminus to just west southwest of Mansfield and from east southeast of Newborn to Pennington the highway had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface From just west southwest of Mansfield to east southeast of Newborn which included the SR 142 segment with which SR 213 had a brief concurrency it was hard surfaced 2 3 In 1953 the segment of SR 213 from east southeast of Newborn to Pennington was hard surfaced From its western terminus to just west of Mansfield it had completed grading but was not surfaced 30 31 Between 1955 and the middle of 1957 the western end of SR 213 was paved 7 8 At the end of the 1950s all of the highway was paved 8 32 In 1982 SR 213 was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 213 Spur edit nbsp State Route 213 SpurLocationPenningtonExisted1963 32 19 1982 21 13 State Route 213 Spur SR 213 Spur was a spur route of SR 213 that existed entirely in Pennington which is southwest of Madison in Morgan County Between 1960 and the end of 1963 SR 213 Spur was established in Pennington from SR 213 to SR 83 32 19 In 1982 it was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 214 edit nbsp State Route 214LocationMacon CountyExisted1942 11 12 1982 21 13 State Route 214 SR 214 was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state It was entirely within Macon County In 1942 it was established from SR 26 east southeast of Fountainville to another intersection with SR 26 in Oglethorpe 11 12 The next year its entire length had a completed hard surface 12 14 The highway remained virtually unchanged for the next 40 years In 1982 SR 214 was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 214 Bypass edit nbsp State Route 214 BypassLocationOglethorpeExisted1965 19 20 1982 21 13 State Route 214 Bypass SR 214 Byp was a bypass route of SR 214 just west of Oglethorpe Between 1963 and 1966 it was established from SR 26 SR 49 southwest of the city to SR 214 SR 214 Spur northwest of it 19 20 In 1982 SR 214 Byp was decommissioned and redesignated as the southern part of SR 128 Byp 21 13 State Route 214 Spur edit nbsp State Route 214 SpurLocationOglethorpeExisted1965 19 20 1982 21 13 State Route 214 Spur SR 214 Spur was a spur route of SR 214 that existed mostly within the city limits of Oglethorpe Between 1963 and 1966 SR 214 Spur was established from SR 214 SR 214 Byp northwest of Oglethorpe to SR 90 SR 128 in the city 19 20 In 1982 SR 214 Spur was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 217 edit nbsp State Route 217LocationMacon CountyExisted1942 11 12 1969 33 9 State Route 217 SR 217 was a state highway that existed entirely within Macon County In 1942 it was established from SR 128 north of Oglethorpe to SR 127 south southeast of Reynolds 11 12 Between 1963 and 1966 the entire length of the highway had a topsoil or gravel surface 19 20 In 1969 SR 217 was decommissioned 33 9 State Route 218 edit nbsp State Route 218LocationWalker and Catoosa countiesExisted1942 11 12 1985 4 5 State Route 218 SR 218 was a short state highway that existed in Walker and Catoosa counties It is currently known as Lakeview Drive In 1942 it was established from US 27 SR 1 in Lakeview to SR 146 southeast of that city 11 12 Between November 1946 and February 1948 the entire highway was hard surfaced 2 3 In 1985 SR 218 was decommissioned 4 5 State Route 221 editThis section is about the former state highway For the current U S Highway see U S Route 221 in Georgia nbsp State Route 221LocationJasper CountyExisted1943 12 14 1983 13 4 State Route 221 SR 221 was a state highway that existed in the west central part of Jasper County In 1943 it was established from SR 16 west of Monticello to SR 11 in Prospect 12 14 A decade later the entire highway had completed grading but was not surfaced 30 31 Between 1957 and the end of 1960 the entire length was paved 8 32 The highway remained virtually unchanged for the next two decades In 1983 it was decommissioned 13 4 State Route 222 edit nbsp State Route 222LocationMeriwether CountyExisted1943 12 14 1986 5 34 State Route 222 SR 222 was a short state highway that existed entirely within the southeastern part of Meriwether County Today it is known as Jesse Cole Road In 1943 it was established from SR 85 east northeast of Manchester to SR 173 north of that city Its entire length had completed grading but was not surfaced 12 14 By the end of 1948 its entire length had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 2 3 Between 1955 and the middle of 1957 SR 85 was redesignated as SR 85E 7 8 By the end of 1960 the entire length of SR 222 was paved 8 32 In 1986 this highway was decommissioned 5 34 State Route 226 edit nbsp State Route 226LocationDawson and Hall countiesExisted1943 12 14 1980 35 36 State Route 226 SR 226 was a state highway that existed in the north central part of the state It traversed parts of Dawson and Hall counties In 1943 it was established from SR 53 to SR 9E at two different points northwest of Gainesville 12 14 By the end of 1946 its entire length was hard surfaced 15 2 Between 1957 and the end of 1960 the southern terminus was truncated to the Hall Dawson county line 8 32 Between 1963 and 1966 it was further truncated to a point just west of the county line 19 20 In 1968 yet another truncation left the southern terminus at the northern shore of Lake Lanier 37 33 In 1980 SR 226 was decommissioned 35 36 State Route 229 edit nbsp State Route 229LocationWalton Newton Jasper countiesExisted1943 12 14 1982 21 13 State Route 229 SR 229 was a state highway in the central part of the state It traversed parts of Walton Newton and Jasper counties The roadway that would eventually become SR 229 was an unnumbered road built between 1921 and the end of 1926 between SR 11 in Social Circle to SR 12 southeast of the city Its entire length had a sand clay or top soil surface 22 23 In 1930 this road was designated as SR 60 24 25 In 1937 part of SR 142 was established on a path from Farrar to Newborn 26 27 At the end of 1940 SR 60 was redesignated as SR 181 The segment of SR 142 was under construction 28 29 At the end of 1941 SR 181 was redesignated as SR 213 16 11 The next year the SR 142 segment had completed grading but was not surfaced 11 12 In 1943 SR 213 was designated on a southern alignment which may have included a portion from Mansfield east northeast to SR 142 in Newborn and then north northwest to SR 12 east of Covington However these segments were not indicated on maps The SR 142 segment had a sand clay or top soil surface SR 229 was designated from SR 11 in Monticello to SR 142 north northwest of Farrar The southern part of this segment had a completed hard surface its northern part had a sand clay or top soil surface 12 14 By the end of 1946 the northern segment of SR 213 was redesignated as part of SR 229 It was also designated on a segment from Newborn to east of Covington however there was no indication if the three segments were connected by concurrencies with other highways or not The northern portion of the segment from Monticello to north northwest of Farrar had completed grading but was not surfaced 15 2 By the end of 1948 the SR 142 segment was hard surfaced SR 229 s segment from Newborn to east of Covington had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 2 3 By the end of 1951 the northern segment of SR 229 was hard surfaced 38 39 The portion from Monticello to north northwest of Farrar was also hard surfaced 30 31 Between 1957 and the end of 1960 the portion from Newborn to east of Covington was paved 8 32 In 1982 SR 229 was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 235 edit nbsp State Route 235LocationFulton CountyLength2 2 mi citation needed 3 5 km Existed1944 12 14 1963 32 19 Former SR 235 was a 2 2 mile long 3 5 km citation needed loop road from SR 9 in what is now the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta Heading south it pulled off of SR 9 Roswell Road onto Habersham Road NW turning left onto Chatham Road NW following it to Andrews Drive NW turning right onto Andrews Drive NW and following it until rejoining SR 9 Peachtree Road The road first appeared in 1944 12 14 and was deleted between 1961 and 1963 when it was converted to a local road 32 19 40 State Route 238 edit nbsp State Route 238LocationTroup CountyExisted1946 15 2 1975 41 42 State Route 238 SR 238 was a short state highway that existed in the west central part of the state It was entirely within Troup County Between 1945 and the end of 1946 it was established from the Alabama state line west southwest of LaGrange to US 29 SR 14 southwest of Lees Crossing 15 2 By the end of 1948 the entire highway except for the westernmost portion had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 2 3 The next year the western terminus also had that same type of surface 3 43 By the middle of 1950 all of the highway was hard surfaced 43 38 In 1975 SR 238 was decommissioned 41 42 State Route 239 edit nbsp State Route 239LocationWalker and Chattooga countiesExisted1946 15 2 1976 42 17 State Route 239 SR 239 was a state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state It traversed the northwestern part of Walker County and the southwestern part of Chattooga County Between 1945 and the end of 1946 it was established from SR 48 in Cloudland to SR 157 southeast of Rising Fawn Its entire length was hard surfaced 15 2 Almost exactly 30 years later the southern portion of SR 157 was shifted southeastward replacing all of SR 239 42 17 State Route 243 edit nbsp State Route 243LocationGordon to MilledgevilleLength21 2 mi 44 34 1 km Existed1946 15 2 2019 45 Main article Georgia State Route 243 State Route 243 SR 243 was a state highway that existed on a path from southwest of Gordon to Milledgeville It traversed portions of northwestern Wilkinson and south central Baldwin counties The southernmost 13 4 miles 21 6 km was part of the Fall Line Freeway a highway that connects Columbus and Augusta State Route 244 edit nbsp State Route 244LocationTroup CountyExisted1948 2 3 1975 41 42 State Route 244 SR 244 was a short state highway that existed in the west central part of the state It was completely within Troup County Between 1946 and the end of 1948 it was established from the Alabama state line west northwest of LaGrange to SR 109 Its entire length was hard surfaced 2 3 In 1975 it was decommissioned 41 42 State Route 245 edit nbsp State Route 245LocationMineral Bluff McCaysvilleExisted1948 2 3 1977 17 18 State Route 245 SR 245 was a state highway in Fannin County Between 1946 and 1948 SR 245 was designated from Mineral Bluff to McCaysville Each terminus had a completed hard surface the central part had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 2 3 The next year the entire length of SR 245 was hard surfaced 3 43 In 1977 SR 60 s path from northwest of Morganton to the North Carolina state line was shifted westward replacing all of SR 245 Its former path from Mineral Bluff to the state line was redesignated as SR 60 Spur 17 18 State Route 248 edit nbsp State Route 248LocationWashington and Hancock countiesExisted1949 3 43 1982 21 13 State Route 248 SR 248 was a state highway that existed in the east central part of the state It traversed the north central portion of Washington County and the east central portion of Hancock County Between 1948 and the end of 1949 it was established from SR 102 north northeast of Warthen to SR 16 in Jewell The southern half of the highway had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 3 43 In 1953 this portion had completed grading but was not surfaced The Hancock County portion was hard surfaced 30 31 Between 1955 and the middle of 1957 the entire highway was paved 7 8 In 1982 it was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 249 edit nbsp State Route 249LocationMurrayville DahlonegaExisted1949 3 43 1957 7 8 State Route 249 SR 249 was a short lived state highway Between 1946 and 1948 an unnumbered road was built from Murrayville to Dahlonega it had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 2 3 The next year the unnumbered road between Murrayville and Dahlonega was designated as SR 249 3 43 By the middle of 1950 all of SR 249 was hard surfaced 43 38 By 1957 SR 60 was extended south southwest on US 19 SR 9 into Dahlonega then south southeast to Gainesville replacing all of SR 249 7 8 State Route 250 edit nbsp State Route 250LocationTattnall and Evans countiesExisted1949 3 43 1985 4 5 State Route 250 SR 250 was a state highway that existed in Tattnall and Evans counties The roadway that would eventually become SR 250 was established between 1945 and the end of 1946 as an eastern segment of SR 64 from US 25 SR 73 south of Claxton to US 280 SR 30 east southeast of Daisy This segment was indicated to be projected mileage 15 2 By the end of 1948 the southern terminus of this segment was completed grading but was not surfaced 2 3 By the end of 1949 SR 250 was established on a slightly different alignment It began at an intersection with US 25 US 301 SR 73 south of Claxton at a point farther south than the eastern segment of SR 64 did Its eastern terminus was at SR 129 south southeast of Claxton in the northwestern part of Camp Stewart 3 43 By the end of 1951 the portion of SR 64 on either side of the SR 250 intersection had a sand clay topsoil or stabilized earth surface 38 39 In 1953 the entire Tattnall County portion of SR 64 had completed grading but was not surfaced The northern terminus of it was shifted westward to end in Daisy 30 31 By the middle of 1957 SR 250 was shifted northwest replacing the entire length of the eastern segment of SR 64 7 8 By the end of 1963 the entire length of SR 250 was paved 32 19 In 1985 SR 250 was decommissioned 4 5 State Route 258 edit nbsp State Route 258LocationTroup CountyExisted1949 3 43 1965 19 20 State Route 258 SR 258 was a state highway that existed in the west central part of the state It was entirely within Troup County Between February 1948 and April 1949 it was established from US 27 SR 1 west northwest of Hogansville to US 29 SR 14 in that city 3 43 In 1953 the entire length of the highway was hard surfaced 30 31 Between June 1963 and the end of 1966 it was redesignated as a southern extension of SR 54 19 20 State Route 259 edit nbsp State Route 259LocationTarboro AtkinsonExisted1949 3 43 1980 46 35 State Route 259 SR 259 was a state highway in the southeastern part of the state It traversed the northwestern part of Camden County and the southeastern part of Brantley County Between February 1948 and April 1949 it was established from SR 252 in Tarboro to US 84 SR 50 in Atkinson The Camden portion of the highway had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 3 43 Between 1963 and the end of 1966 the entire length had a topsoil or gravel surface 19 20 In 1968 the northern half of the Brantley County portion was hard surfaced 37 33 In 1978 the rest of the highway was hard surfaced 18 46 At the beginning of 1980 SR 259 was decommissioned 46 35 State Route 261 edit nbsp State Route 261LocationLong CountyExisted1949 3 43 1981 36 21 State Route 261 SR 261 was a state highway that existed in the eastern part of the state It was entirely within Long County Between February 1948 and April 1949 it was established from the Altamaha River on the Wayne Long county line to US 25 US 301 SR 23 south of Glennville 3 43 By August 1950 it was extended northeast to an intersection with SR 196 at a point south southeast of Glennville 43 38 By the end of 1951 the southern terminus of the highway was shifted northwest to be just north northwest of the Wayne Long Tattnall county tripoint 38 39 In 1952 the southern terminus of SR 261 was reverted to its former location The northern half of the highway had completed grading but was not surfaced 39 31 Between 1957 and the end of 1960 the southern terminus was truncated slightly to the northeast 8 32 Between 1963 and the end of 1965 the southern terminus was once again reverted to its former location At this time the entire highway had a topsoil or gravel surface 19 20 In 1967 the northern half was hard surfaced 47 37 In 1981 SR 261 was decommissioned 36 21 State Route 263 edit nbsp State Route 263LocationTaylor CountyExisted1949 3 43 1987 34 48 State Route 263 SR 263 was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state It was entirely within Taylor County Between February 1948 and April 1949 it was established from SR 128 north of Reynolds to US 19 SR 3 south southwest of Salem 3 43 In 1953 the southern half of the highway was hard surfaced 30 31 By the middle of 1955 the northern half had a sand clay topsoil or stabilized earth surface 6 7 By mid 1957 this segment was paved 7 8 In 1987 SR 263 was decommissioned 34 48 State Route 265 edit nbsp State Route 265LocationTelfair CountyExisted1949 3 43 1976 42 17 State Route 265 SR 265 was a very short state highway that existed in the south central part of the state It was entirely within Telfair County Between February 1948 and April 1949 it was established from SR 117 east northeast of Jacksonville to SR 149 northeast of that town 3 43 Between September 1953 and June 1954 the entire highway was hard surfaced 31 6 In 1976 the portion of SR 149 south of the SR 265 intersection was shifted northeastward replacing all of SR 265 42 17 State Route 267 edit nbsp State Route 267LocationMarion and Talbot countiesExisted1950 43 38 1997 49 50 State Route 267 SR 267 was a short state highway that existed in the west central part of the state Between April 1949 and August 1950 it was established from SR 41 south of Geneva to US 80 SR 22 west southwest of it The entire length of the highway had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 43 38 In 1953 the northern terminus was shifted slightly to the west southwest 30 31 Between July 1957 and June 1960 the entire length was paved 8 32 By the middle of 1963 the northern half of the highway was redesignated as part of SR 355 32 19 In 1997 SR 267 was decommissioned 49 50 State Route 269 edit nbsp State Route 269LocationTaliaferro CountyExisted1950 43 38 1983 13 4 State Route 269 SR 269 was a short state highway that existed in the east central part of the state The highway was completely within Taliaferro County however the southern part traveled on the Warren Taliaferro county line Between April 1949 and August 1950 the highway was established from SR 12 southeast of Crawfordville to SR 47 in Sharon Its entire length had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface 43 38 By the end of 1951 the entire highway was hard surfaced 38 39 In 1983 SR 269 was decommissioned 13 4 State Route 276 edit nbsp State Route 276LocationLong CountyExisted1950 43 38 1981 36 21 State Route 276 SR 276 was a short state highway that existed in the eastern part of the state It was entirely within Long County Between April 1949 and August 1950 it was established from a point west northwest of Ludowici to US 25 US 301 SR 23 northwest of the city 43 38 Between 1963 and 1966 the southern terminus was shifted slightly westward At this time the entire length of the highway had a topsoil or gravel surface 19 20 In 1981 SR 276 was decommissioned 36 21 State Route 277 edit nbsp State Route 277LocationLaurens CountyExisted1950 43 38 1960 8 32 State Route 277 SR 277 was a short lived state highway that existed in the central part of the state It was completely within Laurens County Between April 1949 and August 1950 it was established from the Dodge Laurens Bleckley county tripoint to US 80 SR 19 SR 26 in Dublin The entire Dexter Dublin segment was hard surfaced 43 38 Between September 1953 and June 1954 the southern terminus of the highway was truncated to just west of Dexter 31 6 By the middle of 1955 the southern terminus was reverted to just south southeast of its former location 6 7 By mid 1957 the southern terminus was shifted to its original location 7 8 By the middle of 1960 SR 277 was redesignated as an eastern extension of SR 257 8 32 State Route 287 edit nbsp State Route 287LocationTaylor CountyLength3 mi citation needed 4 8 km Existed1950 43 38 1987 34 48 State Route 287 SR 287 was a short north south state highway that existed in the central part of the state It was completely within Taylor County Between April 1949 and August 1950 SR 287 was established from a point just south of the Macon Taylor county line southeast of Reynolds to SR 96 east of that city 43 38 In 1952 the southern terminus was truncated to the county line 39 30 The next year the entire highway was hard surfaced 30 31 By the middle of 1954 the southern terminus was truncated slightly 31 6 By the middle of 1955 the southern terminus was reverted to the county line 6 7 Near the end of the decade the southern terminus was truncated again to the point that it was in 1954 7 8 Between 1963 and 1966 the southern terminus was reverted once again to the county line 19 20 In 1987 SR 287 was decommissioned 34 48 State Route 289 edit nbsp State Route 289LocationAppling and Jeff Davis countiesLength9 mi citation needed 14 km Existed1951 38 39 1980 46 35 State Route 289 SR 289 was a state highway that existed in the southeastern part of the state It traveled along the Appling Jeff Davis county line Between 1950 and 1952 it was established from US 23 SR 15 south southwest of Graham to US 341 SR 27 in the city 38 39 In 1953 the central portion of the highway was shifted eastward to a more direct path between its termini The portion of the highway north of the Big Satilla River had completed grading but was not surfaced 30 31 Between 1960 and the middle of 1963 the portion south of the river was given the same treatment 32 19 In 1970 the portion north of the river was hard surfaced 9 10 Between 1978 and March 1980 SR 289 was decommissioned 46 35 State Route 290 edit nbsp State Route 290LocationQuitman CountyLength2 mi citation needed 3 2 km Existed1951 38 39 1981 36 21 State Route 290 SR 290 was a short north south state highway that existed in the southwestern part of the state It was entirely within Quitman County Between 1950 and 1952 it was established as an S shaped highway from Hatcher to US 82 SR 50 west southwest of Springvale 38 39 In 1952 the southern terminus was shifted westward This put the highway on a nearly due north south direction 39 30 Between September 1953 and June 1954 the entire length of the highway was hard surfaced 31 6 In 1981 SR 290 was decommissioned 36 21 State Route 291 edit nbsp State Route 291LocationQuitman CountyLength2 mi citation needed 3 2 km Existed1951 38 39 1981 36 21 State Route 291 SR 291 was a short state highway that existed in the southwestern part of the state It was located completely within Quitman County Between August 1950 and the end of 1951 it was established as an S shaped highway from Morris to US 82 SR 50 nearly due wet of Springvale 38 39 In 1952 the southern terminus was shifted slightly This put the highway on a nearly due southwest northeast direction 39 30 The next year the southern terminus was shifted slightly to the northwest 30 31 By the middle of 1954 the southern terminus was extended slightly to the west The entire length of the highway was hard surfaced 31 6 Between 1963 and 1966 the alignment of the highway was shifted to become a J shaped highway 19 20 In 1981 SR 291 was decommissioned 36 21 State Route 294 edit nbsp State Route 294LocationBartow CountyExisted1957 7 8 1965 19 20 State Route 294 SR 294 was a short state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state It traveled completely within Bartow County The roadway that would eventually become SR 294 was established in 1952 as SR 294N from Allatoona Dam east of Cartersville to SR 20 northeast of the city 39 30 The next year the entire length of SR 294N was hard surfaced 30 31 Between June 1955 and July 1957 it was redesignated as SR 294 7 8 Between 1963 and 1966 it was again redesignated as SR 294N 19 20 This roadway would eventually become SR 20 Spur 51 52 State Route 294N edit nbsp State Route 294NLocationBartow CountyExisted1952 39 30 1957 7 8 nbsp State Route 294NLocationBartow CountyExisted1965 19 20 1994 51 52 State Route 294N SR 294N was a short state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state It traveled completely within Bartow County It was established in 1952 from Allatoona Dam east of Cartersville to SR 20 northeast of the city 39 30 The next year all of SR 294N was hard surfaced 30 31 Between June 1955 and July 1957 the highway was redesignated as SR 294 7 8 Between 1963 and 1966 SR 294 was again redesignated as SR 294N 19 20 In 1994 SR 294N was redesignated as SR 20 Spur 51 52 State Route 294S edit nbsp State Route 294SLocationEmersonExisted1952 39 30 1977 17 18 State Route 294S SR 294S was a short state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state It traveled completely within Bartow County Nearly the entire highway was within the city limits of Emerson In 1952 it was established from US 41 SR 3 in Emerson to just west of Red Top Mountain State Park in the far northeastern part of the city 39 30 The next year the entire highway was hard surfaced 30 31 By the middle of 1955 US 41 SR 3 in the area was shifted eastward the western terminus of SR 294S was then at SR 293 6 7 In 1977 SR 294S was decommissioned 17 18 State Route 295 edit nbsp State Route 295LocationAtlantaExisted1954 31 6 1957 7 8 State Route 295 SR 295 was a short lived state highway in the city of Atlanta Between September 1953 and June 1954 it was established on what was listed on maps as simply Expressway a predecessor of I 75 I 85 Downtown Connector from US 19 US 41 SR 3 at Lakewood Avenue to University Avenue 31 6 Between 1955 and the middle of 1957 it was decommissioned 7 8 State Route 300 1959 1982 edit nbsp State Route 300LocationJasper and Putnam countiesLength20 3 mi 53 32 7 km Existed1960 8 32 1982 21 13 State Route 300 SR 300 was a state highway that existed in the central part of the state It followed a route between Monticello and US 129 US 441 SR 24 near the Rock Eagle State 4 H Club Center north of Eatonton It was established in 1960 8 32 Later that year a small portion at the eastern terminus was paved 32 19 By 1967 the section from its western terminus to the intersection with SR 142 was paved 20 47 In 1970 the entire length of the highway was paved 9 10 By 1983 the highway was decommissioned and given to local authority 21 13 SR 300 was reused as a renumbering of part of SR 257 and all of SR 333 Note that SR 333 would be reused on an unrelated route in 1993 CountyLocationmi 53 kmDestinationsNotesJasperMonticello0 00 0 nbsp SR 83 Madison Street Forsyth MadisonWestern terminusPutnamOconee National Forest10 516 9 nbsp SR 142 Shady Dale Road NW Willard Shady Dale20 332 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 129 US 441 SR 24 Madison Road Eastern terminus1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 304 edit nbsp State Route 304LocationColumbia CountyLength6 mi citation needed 9 7 km Existed1957 7 8 1987 34 48 State Route 304 SR 304 was a north south state highway that was located in the east central part of the state It was completely within Columbia County Between June 1955 and July 1957 it was established from US 221 SR 47 just north of Appling north northeast to US 221 SR 104 SR 150 in Pollards Corner It was completely concurrent with US 221 The entire length of US 221 SR 304 was paved 7 8 In 1987 SR 47 between Appling and Leah was shifted eastward to travel concurrently with US 221 This necessitated a decommissioning of SR 304 34 48 State Route 312 edit nbsp State Route 312LocationBainbridge WhighamLength15 4 mi citation needed 24 8 km Existed1960 8 32 1980 35 36 State Route 312 SR 312 was an east west state highway that was located in the southwestern part of the state Between July 1957 and June 1960 it was established from US 27 Bus US 84 Bus SR 38 in Bainbridge to US 84 SR 38 in Whigham 8 32 The portion of SR 312 from Bainbridge to SR 262 north northeast of Climax was paved From that point to Whigham had a topsoil or gravel unpaved surface 8 32 By the middle of 1963 the eastern part of the highway was also paved 32 19 In 1980 SR 312 was decommissioned 35 36 State Route 318 edit nbsp State Route 318LocationDawson CountyLength6 351 mi 54 10 221 km Existed1960 8 32 1985 4 5 State Route 318 SR 318 was a west east state highway that existed in the north central part of the state It traveled completely within Dawson County Between July 1957 and June 1960 it was established from the Dawson Demonstration Forest and Wildlife Management Area south southwest of Dawsonville to SR 53 southeast of that city The entire length of the highway was paved 8 32 By the middle of 1963 it was extended south southeast on a concurrency with SR 53 then solely east and southeast to War Hill Park northeast of Chestatee 32 19 In 1971 the western terminus was truncated to SR 9 south of Dawsonville 10 55 In 1980 the eastern terminus was truncated to SR 53 35 36 In 1985 SR 318 was decommissioned 4 5 State Route 319 editThis section is about the former state highway For the current U S Highway see U S Route 319 in Georgia nbsp State Route 319LocationBarrow and Jackson countiesExisted1960 8 32 1990 56 57 State Route 319 SR 319 was a state highway that existed in the north central part of the state It traversed the northeastern part of Barrow County and the south central part of Jackson County Between July 1957 and June 1960 it was established from SR 211 north northwest of Statham to US 129 SR 24 about halfway between Arcade and Jefferson 8 32 The entire highway was paved at this time 8 32 The highway was virtually unchanged for the next 30 years In 1990 it was decommissioned 56 57 State Route 321 edit nbsp State Route 321LocationBryan and Bulloch countiesExisted1960 8 32 1967 47 37 State Route 321 SR 321 was a short lived state highway that existed in the eastern part of the state It traversed the northwestern part of Bryan County and the southeastern part of Bulloch County Between July 1957 and June 1960 it was established from US 280 SR 30 SR 63 in Pembroke north northeast to SR 119 west northwest of Blitchton 8 32 The entire Bryan County portion was paved while the entire Bulloch County portion had a topsoil or gravel unpaved surface 8 32 By the middle of 1963 the Bulloch County portion was paved SR 321 was designated on a separate segment from US 80 SR 26 south southeast of Stilson then northeast and north northwest to SR 119 southwest of Guyton From the southern terminus of this segment to the turn to the north northwest had a topsoil or gravel unpaved surface while the rest of it was paved There was no indication if the two segments were connected via concurrencies with SR 119 and US 80 SR 26 or if they were two separate segments 32 19 By the end of 1966 SR 119 s segment at the northern terminus of the original segment was redesignated as part of SR 46 SR 321 s southern segment was extended on a direct connection with the newer segment The central portion of the newer segment was hard surfaced 19 20 In 1967 SR 119 was re routed southward replacing all of SR 321 The former path of SR 119 through Stilson was redesignated as SR 119 Conn 47 37 State Route 322 edit nbsp State Route 322LocationEmanuel Toombs countiesExisted1960 8 32 1966 19 20 State Route 322 SR 322 was a state highway in the central part of the state Between 1957 and the end of 1960 it was established from US 1 SR 4 SR 46 in Oak Park then south southeast to SR 292 east of Lyons 8 32 In the middle of the 1960s its entire length was redesignated as an eastern extension of SR 86 19 20 State Route 333 1963 1982 edit nbsp State Route 333LocationThomas Mitchell Dougherty Lamar Pike Spalding Henry and Clayton countiesExisted1963 32 19 1982 21 13 State Route 333 SR 333 was a north south state highway that existed in two separate segments in the state The highway traversed portions of Thomas Mitchell Dougherty Lamar Pike Spalding Henry and Clayton counties Between June 1960 and June 1963 the highway was established on US 19 from the Florida state line to Camilla This truncated SR 35 which was concurrent with US 19 from the Florida state line to Thomasville The segment of US 19 between Thomasville and Meigs with which SR 3 was concurrent was redesignated as US 19 Bus SR 333 was established on a sole routing from Camilla to the eastern part of Albany while US 19 SR 3 traveled on a slightly more western path SR 333 was also established on US 19 US 41 from SR 16 in Griffin to an indeterminate location between Jonesboro and Hapeville From Griffin to Lovejoy and in Jonesboro SR 3 traveled on a more eastern path Between Lovejoy and Jonesboro and from north northwest of Jonesboro US 19 US 41 SR 3 SR 333 traveled concurrently 32 19 By 1966 US 19 between Camilla and Albany was shifted eastward to travel concurrently with SR 333 It was unclear if the northern terminus of SR 333 was truncated to Lovejoy or not 19 20 That year SR 333 was indicated to be projected mileage from an unnumbered road in the southern part of Barnesville then west northwest and north northwest through Aldora then north northeast past US 41 SR 7 then north northwest through Milner then northwest and north northwest past US 19 SR 3 south of Griffin then north northwest through the western part of Griffin to connect with the US 19 US 41 SR 3 SR 333 intersection with SR 92 in the northern part of the city 20 47 The next year US 341 s path through the Barnesville Aldora area was shifted southwestward to travel concurrently with SR 333 from just south of Barnesville to US 41 SR 7 Conn just north of the city SR 333 was indicated to be projected mileage and under construction from this intersection to the US 19 US 41 SR 3 SR 92 SR 333 intersection in Griffin 47 37 In 1968 the highway was indicated to be projected mileage from the US 19 US 82 SR 50S SR 333 and US 19 SR 3W intersections in Albany The under construction segment from just north of Barnesville to south of Griffin was completed 37 33 The next year the portion of SR 333 from just north of Barnesville to Griffin was decommissioned 33 9 In 1970 all of SR 333 north of Griffin was also decommissioned 9 10 In 1974 a freeway was built in Albany with SR 333 designated on it 58 41 Three years later US 19 through the main part of Albany was shifted northeast to travel concurrently with the SR 333 freeway 17 18 By March 1980 US 82 in Albany was also shifted onto the freeway 46 35 Later that year the northern terminus of SR 333 was truncated to the US 19 US 19 Bus US 82 US 82 Bus SR 50 SR 50 Bus SR 62 SR 333 interchange in Albany with SR 50 shifted onto the freeway 35 36 In 1982 all of SR 333 that remained was redesignated as SR 300 21 13 SR 333 was reused in 1993 for part of the old alignment of SR 33 which was rerouted over part of SR 133 SR 133 took over part of the old alignment of SR 33 and took over a portion of SR 94 State Route 333 Spur edit nbsp State Route 333 SpurLocationAlbanyExisted1976 1980State Route 333 Spur SR 333 Spur was a proposed spur route of SR 333 that was planned to be put inside the city limits of Albany In 1976 it was indicated to be projected mileage from the SR 333 freeway just north of the Clark Avenue interchange and northeast to Turner Field Road 42 17 In 1980 it was deleted never having been built 46 35 State Route 336 edit nbsp State Route 336LocationStephens CountyExisted1960 32 19 1982 21 13 State Route 336 SR 336 was a state highway that existed in the northeastern part of the state On October 28 1960 it was established from SR 328 east of Avalon to SR 17 in the southeastern part of Toccoa The entire highway was paved 32 19 On November 29 1982 the highway was decommissioned 21 13 It is locally known as Rock Creek Road formerly Brookhaven Circle State Route 340 edit nbsp State Route 340LocationAustell Fair OaksExisted1963 32 19 1983 13 4 State Route 340 SR 340 was a state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area It traversed the northeastern part of Douglas County and the south central part of Cobb County The roadway that would eventually become SR 340 was established in 1952 as an unnumbered road from US 78 SR 8 in Austell to SR 3 in Fair Oaks 39 30 Between June 1960 and June 1963 this road was designated as SR 340 The entire length of the highway was paved 32 19 In 1983 SR 5 was re routed on a more southerly track replacing all of SR 340 13 4 State Route 342 edit nbsp State Route 342LocationDawson CountyLength5 240 mi 54 8 433 km Existed1963 32 19 1982 21 13 State Route 342 SR 342 was a 5 240 mile long 8 433 km state highway that existed in the north central part of the state It was completely within Dawson County On March 28 1961 it was established from SR 183 southeast of Juno to SR 52 southeast of Amicalola on the southern edge of the Chattahoochee Oconee National Forest The entire highway was paved 32 19 On January 18 1982 it was decommissioned 21 13 It is today known as Keith Evans Road from SR 183 to SR 136 and Bailey Waters Rd from SR 136 to SR 52 State Route 343 edit nbsp State Route 343LocationTallulah Falls WileyExisted1963 32 19 1965 19 20 State Route 343 SR 343 was a short lived state highway that existed in the northeastern part of the state It was completely within Rabun County Between June 1960 and June 1963 it was established on a concurrency with US 23 US 441 and possibly SR 15 from Tallulah Falls and Wiley The entire path of this concurrency was paved 32 19 By the end of 1965 it was decommissioned with US 23 US 441 SR 15 all traveling on SR 343 s former path 19 20 The only part today that is not part of US 23 441 is Wylie Connector which was used as the temporary transition from the new route to the original routing State Route 344 edit nbsp State Route 344LocationRome CartersvilleExisted1963 32 19 1977 17 18 State Route 344 SR 344 was a state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state It traversed portions of Floyd and Bartow counties The highway that would eventually become SR 344 was established at least as early as 1919 as part of SR 4 from Rome to Cartersville 59 By the end of 1926 a portion of the highway from just east of Rome to a point northwest of Cartersville was under construction In the northwestern part of Cartersville and farther to the west a portion of the highway had a completed semi hard surface 22 23 Within three years the segment of SR 4 was redesignated as part of SR 20 with US 41W designated on it The portion of the highway just east of Rome had a completed hard surface The highway was under construction northwest of Cartersville 23 60 By the middle of 1930 the entire Rome Cartersville segment had a completed hard surface 60 24 Before the end of 1934 US 41W between Rome and Cartersville was redesignated as part of US 411 61 62 In 1953 a small portion of SR 20 in the northern part of Cartersville was hard surfaced 30 31 A few years later all portions of SR 20 that had been built were paved 7 8 Between 1960 and 1963 US 411 between Rome and Cartersville was shifted on a more southerly routing concurrent with SR 344 which was commissioned at this time SR 20 remained on the old alignment 32 19 In 1977 SR 344 was decommissioned and SR 20 was shifted onto US 411 between Rome and Cartersville SR 20 s old alignment was redesignated as part of SR 293 17 18 State Route 345 edit nbsp State Route 345LocationCatoosa and Floyd CountiesExistedSeptember 1962 63 December 1962State Route 345 SR 345 was a state highway that was assigned to what is now SR 100 from SR 20 west of Coosa to SR 114 in Summerville in Catoosa and Floyd counties It existed from September 1962 to December 12 1962 64 State Route 346 edit nbsp State Route 346LocationJackson CountyLength5 36 mi 65 8 63 km Existed1963 32 19 2004 66 67 State Route 346 SR 346 was a short east west state highway that existed in the north central part of the state It was completely within Jackson County Between June 1960 and June 1963 it was established from US 129 SR 11 in Talmo to SR 82 Spur northeast of the city the entire highway was paved 32 19 In 1966 SR 82 Spur and SR 82 swapped paths in the area 20 47 In 2004 SR 346 was decommissioned 66 67 State Route 349 edit nbsp State Route 349LocationFlintstone RossvilleExisted1963 32 19 1986 5 34 State Route 349 SR 349 was an east west state highway that existed in the northwestern part of the state It traveled entirely within the northern part of Walker County Between June 1960 and June 1963 it was established from SR 193 in Flintstone to US 27 SR 1 in Rossville 32 19 In 1986 it was decommissioned 5 34 State Route 350 edit nbsp State Route 350LocationAthensExisted1963 32 19 1966 20 47 State Route 350 SR 350 was a state highway that existed in the Athens Clarke County metropolitan area It was entirely in Clarke County and the city limits of Athens Between June 1960 and June 1963 it was established from US 129 SR 15 in the northwestern part of the city to US 29 SR 8 in the northeastern part The entire divided highway was paved 32 19 By the end of 1965 US 29 was designated on SR 350 from the US 129 SR 15 interchange which also has US 29 Temp and US 441 Temp to the US 29 SR 8 interchange US 441 Temp was designated on it from the US 129 SR 15 interchange to the US 441 SR 15 Alt interchange A western extension of SR 350 ending at US 29 US 78 SR 8 SR 10 was under construction Also SR 350 was under construction east southeast just slightly from the US 29 SR 8 interchange 19 20 In 1966 SR 350 was decommissioned US 29 was designated on the freeway from the western terminus to where it as well as SR 8 depart the freeway This interchange also had SR 8 Bus and SR 106 SR 8 was designated on the entire length of the freeway Its former path through the city was redesignated as SR 8 Bus still concurrent with US 78 SR 10 20 47 State Route 351 edit nbsp State Route 351LocationClayton and Henry countiesLength13 mi 68 21 km Existed1963 32 19 1985 4 5 State Route 351 SR 351 was a 13 mile long 21 km state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area It traversed portions of Clayton and Henry counties Between September 1953 and June 1954 the roadway that would eventually become SR 351 was established as an unnumbered road from SR 138 in Jonesboro to US 23 SR 42 east northeast of Flippen 31 6 Between June 1960 and June 1963 SR 351 was designated on this road 32 19 In 1985 it was decommissioned 4 5 State Route 353 edit nbsp State Route 353LocationCoffee Irwin and Ben Hill countiesExisted1965 19 20 1988 48 69 State Route 353 SR 353 was a north south state highway that was located in the south central part of the state It traversed the northwest portion of Coffee County the extreme northeastern part of Irwin County and the southeastern part of Ben Hill County Between June 1960 and June 1963 the roadway that would eventually become SR 353 was established as an unnumbered road built from SR 158 west of Douglas then north and northwest to SR 268 west southwest of Broxton 32 19 By the end of 1965 SR 353 was designated on this road and extended northwest to the Coffee Irwin county line 19 20 In 1966 SR 353 was proposed to be extended northwest to SR 206 north northeast of Wray in the southeastern part of Ben Hill County 20 47 In 1973 the highway was extended on this planned path 70 58 In 1980 it was extended south southeast around the southwestern part of Douglas to SR 135 46 35 In 1988 SR 206 was shifted southeast replacing all of SR 353 48 69 The old route of SR 206 later became SR 706 State Route 357 edit nbsp State Route 357LocationColumbusLength15 5 mi citation needed 24 9 km Existed1965 19 20 1983 13 4 State Route 357 SR 357 was a 15 5 mile long 24 9 km north south state highway that was located in the west central part of the state It was completely within Muscogee County and the city limits of Columbus In April 1932 the roadway that would eventually become SR 357 was built as an unnumbered road from the main part of Columbus east to the western edge of Fort Benning 71 72 Later that year SR 103 was designated on this road with a completed hard surface 72 73 In 1952 an unnumbered road was built from SR 103 in the eastern part of Columbus north northwest to US 27 Alt SR 85 39 30 Between June 1963 and the end of 1965 SR 103 s southern terminus was truncated to Buena Vista Road and Brennan Road in the main part of Columbus Its former path on Buena Vista Road was redesignated as SR 357 The unnumbered road built a decade before was also numbered as part of SR 357 19 20 In 1969 SR 357 was extended south southwest to SR 85 south of Columbus now within Fort Benning This extension replaced SR 1 Spur 33 9 In 1983 SR 357 was decommissioned 13 4 State Route 359 edit nbsp State Route 359LocationChatham CountyExisted1965 19 20 1968 37 33 State Route 359 SR 359 was a short lived state highway that existed completely within Chatham County mostly within the city limits of Savannah Between June 1963 and the end of 1965 it was established from just north of Hunter Air Force Base south of the city to US 17 US 80 SR 25 SR 26S in downtown traveling on Abercorn Street and 37th Street 19 20 In 1968 the entire highway was redesignated as part of SR 204 37 33 State Route 361 edit nbsp State Route 361LocationBibb CountyLength21 mi citation needed 34 km Existed1967 47 37 1982 21 13 State Route 361 SR 361 was a north south state highway that was located in the central part of the state It was completely within Bibb County mostly in the city limits of Macon Between June 1963 and the end of 1966 the roadway that would eventually become SR 361 was built as Hartley Bridge Road and Mt Pleasant Church Road south of Macon 19 20 In 1967 SR 361 was established from US 41 SR 49 SR 247 south of Macon west on Hartley Bridge Road and Mt Pleasant Church Road then north northeast on Fulton Mill Road Heath Road Tucker Road and Foster Road and then northeast on Bass Road to SR 87 east southeast of Bolingbroke 47 37 In 1972 US 23 was shifted onto SR 87 10 55 In 1976 US 129 onto US 41 SR 49 SR 247 south of Macon 42 17 In 1982 SR 361 was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 363 edit nbsp State Route 363LocationSaffold BlakelyLength19 mi citation needed 31 km Existed1967 47 37 1985 4 5 State Route 363 SR 363 was a north south state highway that was located in the southwestern part of the state It was completely within Early County The roadway that would eventually become SR 363 was built in 1952 as an unnumbered road from US 84 SR 38 in Saffold to SR 39 in the southern part of Blakely 39 30 The next year the northern terminus of this road was shifted to SR 62 in the western part of Blakely 30 31 In 1966 the northern terminus was shifted back to its original location 20 47 In 1967 SR 363 was designated on this road 47 37 In 1985 all of SR 363 except for the southern piece was decommissioned This southern portion was redesignated as part of SR 370 4 5 State Route 363 Spur edit nbsp State Route 363 SpurLocationEarly CountyExisted1967 47 37 1985 4 5 State Route 363 Spur SR 363 Spur was a spur route of SR 363 that existed entirely in the southwestern part of Early County Between June 1963 and the end of 1966 an unnumbered road was built west southwest from Cedar Springs 19 20 In 1967 SR 363 Spur was designated on this road 47 37 In 1985 when SR 363 and SR 363 Spur were decommissioned SR 273 was extended west southwest of Cedar Springs This replaced the eastern part of SR 363 Spur What was the western part was redesignated as SR 273 Spur 4 5 State Route 364 edit nbsp State Route 364LocationThomas and Brooks countiesExisted1966 20 47 1982 21 13 State Route 364 SR 364 was an east west state highway that was located in the southern part of the state It traversed portions of Thomas and Brooks counties In 1966 it was established from US 84 SR 38 west of Boston to US 84 SR 38 west of Quitman Its entire length was hard surfaced 20 47 In 1982 it was decommissioned 21 13 State Route 366 edit nbsp State Route 366LocationHart CountyLength10 mi citation needed 16 km Existed1967 47 37 1990 56 57 State Route 366 SR 366 was a north south state highway that was located in the northeastern part of the state It was completely within Hart County In 1967 it was established from an intersection with SR 51 and SR 77 west of Hartwell then northwest on a concurrency with SR 77 and solely north northwest to Interstate 85 I 85 northeast of Lavonia and just south of Tugaloo State Park The entire highway was hard surfaced 47 37 In 1990 SR 77 s path in the Lavonia area was shifted northeast replacing all of SR 366 Its former path was redesignated as SR 77 Conn 56 57 State Route 367 edit nbsp State Route 367LocationWhitemarsh Island Wilmington IslandExisted1969 33 9 1985 4 5 State Route 367 SR 367 was an east west state highway that was located in the east central part of the state It was completely within Chatham County in the Savannah metropolitan area Between June 1963 and the end of 1965 SR 26 Loop was established from US 80 SR 26 in Whitemarsh Island then southeast over Turner Creek then northeast and north northeast to US 80 SR 26 in Wilmington Island Its entire length was hard surfaced 19 20 In 1969 it was redesignated as SR 367 33 9 In 1985 it was decommissioned 4 5 State Route 371 edit nbsp State Route 371LocationForsyth CountyLength6 mi 74 9 7 km Existed1971 10 55 2020 75 State Route 371 SR 371 locally known as Post Road was a north south state highway that was located in Forsyth County On June 8 1971 it was established along part of what had been SR 141 a little after a year after SR 369 replaced what had been a disconnected part of SR 141 After US 19 was moved to SR 400 in 1981 it became mostly a local farm to market road and its continued existence as a state route was a relic After widening and reconstruction of nearby Bethelview Road was completed in 2019 SR 141 was extended in early 2020 along Bethelview Road to SR 20 As a nearly mile for mile swap SR 371 subsequently was transferred to local control in 2020 76 State Route 373 edit nbsp State Route 373LocationGordon CountyExisted1972 55 70 1977 17 18 State Route 373 SR 373 was an east west state highway that was located in the northwestern part of the state It was completely within Gordon County Between June 1963 and the end of 1965 the roadways that would eventually become SR 373 were built as unnumbered roads One extended from Calhoun to Cash The other extended from Cash to SR 53 in Sonoraville 19 20 In 1972 SR 373 was designated on both of these roads starting at SR 156 in Calhoun 55 70 In 1977 it was decommissioned 17 18 State Route 375 edit nbsp State Route 375LocationQuitman and Stewart countiesExisted1972 55 77 1972 55 70 State Route 375 SR 375 was a very short lived state highway that existed in the west central part of the state It traversed portions of Quitman and Stewart counties Between June 1963 and the end of 1965 the roadway that would eventually become SR 375 was built as an unnumbered road from Florence north northeast to Omaha and then eastward to US 27 SR 1 south southeast of Louvale 19 20 In 1968 this road was extended south southwest to SR 27 in Georgetown 37 33 In early 1972 this road was designated as SR 375 55 77 Later that year it was redesignated as a northern extension of SR 39 55 70 State Route 375 Connector edit nbsp State Route 375 ConnectorLocationFlorence LumpkinExisted1972 55 77 1972 55 70 State Route 375 Connector SR 375 Conn was a connector route of SR 375 that existed entirely in Stewart County in the west central part of the state In 1970 the roadway that would eventually become SR 375 Conn was built as an unnumbered road from Florence to US 27 SR 1 in Lumpkin 9 10 In early 1972 this road was designated as SR 375 Conn 55 77 Later that year it was redesignated as SR 39 Conn 55 70 State Route 379 edit nbsp State Route 379LocationPickens CountyExisted1977 17 18 1981 36 21 State Route 379 SR 379 was a short lived east west state highway that was located in the north central part of the state It was completely within Pickens County The roadway that would eventually become SR 379 was established in 1941 as an eastern segment of SR 143 from SR 53 east of Fairmount to SR 5 and SR 53 in Tate 78 16 By the end of 1946 the eastern half of this segment had a sand clay top soil or stabilized earth surface The western half of it was indicated to be projected mileage 2 3 By the end of 1960 nearly the entire part of this highway west of the SR 156 intersection was decommissioned 8 32 By the end of 1963 this decommissioned part was re instated 32 19 In 1970 a portion of it southeast of the SR 53 intersection was hard surfaced 9 10 In 1973 this portion was indicated to be under construction or projected mileage 70 58 In 1977 all of SR 143 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 17 18 In 1981 SR 379 was decommissioned 36 21 State Route 381 edit nbsp State Route 381LocationDallas Cross RoadsExisted1979 46 35 1990 56 57 State Route 381 SR 381 was a north south state highway located in Paulding County in the northwestern part of the state The roadway that would eventually become SR 381 was built in 1939 when SR 92 was extended from Hiram to Acworth 79 By the end of 1948 the entire length of SR 92 that would become SR 381 was hard surfaced 2 3 In 1966 the Dallas New Hope segment of SR 92 was shifted to the southeast Its old alignment became SR 92 Spur 20 47 In 1972 the Hiram New Hope segment of SR 92 was shifted east Its old alignment between New Hope and Cross Roads became a northeast extension of SR 92 Spur 55 70 In 1979 SR 92 Spur was redesignated as SR 381 46 35 In 1990 SR 381 was decommissioned 56 57 State Route 387 edit nbsp State Route 387LocationEast Point College ParkLength2 9 mi 80 4 7 km Existed1990 56 57 1991 57 81 State Route 387 SR 387 was a very short lived state highway that existed in the Atlanta metropolitan area It traversed portions of Fulton and Clayton counties In 1990 it was established on Camp Creek Parkway from Interstate 285 I 285 in East Point to I 85 in College Park 56 57 The next year it was decommissioned 57 81 Junctions CountyLocationmi 80 kmDestinationsNotesFultonEast Point0 00 0 nbsp I 285Western terminus I 285 exit 3Clayton No major junctionsFultonCollege Park2 84 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 29 SR 14 SR 139 Main Street Fulton Claytoncounty line2 94 7 nbsp I 85 ColumbusEastern terminus I 85 exit 18A1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 miState Route 407 Loop 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 needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2019 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources List of former state routes in Georgia 200 699 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp State Route 407 LoopLocationSandy SpringsExisted1990 56 1994 51 State Route 407 Loop SR 407 Loop was a loop route of SR 407 an unsigned designation along Interstate 285 I 285 similar to SR 404 Spur in Savannah It traveled off I 285 now Glenridge Drive and then turned left onto Dunwoody Peachtree Road by Saint Joseph s Hospital of Atlanta to I 285 SR 407 once again The route was officially removed in 1994 51 Routes 400 422 editThese are not considered former but decommissioned because they are either interstate or major freeway Number Length mi Length km Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes nbsp SR 400 53 7 86 4 I 85 SR 403 in Atlanta US 19 SR 60 SR 115 south southeast of Dahlonega 01971 01 01 1971 10 55 current An unbuilt portion south of I 85 to what is now Freedom Parkway was originally planned to be part of I 485 nbsp SR 401 355 11 571 49 I 75 SR 93 at the Florida state line south southeast of Lake Park I 75 at the Tennessee state line at East Ridge Unsigned designation for I 75 nbsp SR 402 202 61 326 07 I 20 at the Alabama state line southwest of Tallapoosa I 20 at the South Carolina state line at Augusta Unsigned designation for I 20 nbsp SR 403 179 9 289 5 I 85 at the Alabama state line at Lanett I 85 at the South Carolina state line east southeast of Gumlog Unsigned designation for I 85 nbsp SR 404 166 81 268 45 I 16 I 75 SR 401 in Macon I 16 and Montgomery Street in Savannah Unsigned designation for I 16 nbsp SR 405 112 03 180 29 I 95 SR 9 at the Florida state line south of Kingsland I 95 at the South Carolina state line north northeast of Port Wentworth Unsigned designation for I 95 nbsp SR 406 19 5 31 4 I 59 at the Alabama state line south southwest of Rising Fawn I 24 I 59 SR 409 west northwest of Wildwood Unsigned designation for I 59 nbsp SR 407 63 98 102 97 Beltway around Atlanta Unsigned designation for I 285 nbsp SR 408 15 83 25 48 I 75 I 475 SR 401 south southwest of Macon I 75 I 475 SR 401 northwest of Bolingbroke Unsigned designation for I 475 nbsp SR 409 4 13 6 65 I 24 at the Tennessee state line west northwest of Wildwood I 24 at the Tennessee state line at Chattanooga Unsigned designation for I 24 nbsp SR 410 6 8 10 9 US 29 US 78 SR 8 Stone Mountain Freeway on the Scottdale North Decatur line US 78 SR 10 Stone Mountain Freeway north of Stone Mountain State highway designation for the Stone Mountain Freeway entirely concurrent with US 78 nbsp SR 411 49 30 79 34 I 185 and Lindsey Creek Parkway in Fort Benning in Columbus I 85 I 185 SR 403 east of LaGrange Unsigned designation for I 185 nbsp SR 412 Albany I 75 I 175 SR 401 near Cordele Unsigned designation for what would have become I 175 had it actually been built nbsp SR 413 11 04 17 77 I 75 I 675 SR 401 in Stockbridge I 285 I 675 SR 407 south southeast of Atlanta Unsigned designation for I 675 nbsp SR 414 5 40 8 69 I 285 I 420 SR 407 in Atlanta I 420 I 675 SR 413 in Atlanta Unsigned designation for what would have become I 420 had it actually been built nbsp SR 415 15 62 25 14 I 20 I 520 SR 232 SR 402 in Augusta I 520 at the South Carolina state line on the Augusta North Augusta line Unsigned designation for I 520 nbsp SR 416 nbsp SR 417 30 97 49 84 I 75 I 575 SR 5 SR 401 southeast of Kennesaw I 575 SR 5 SR 5 Bus SR 372 SR 515 west of Nelson Unsigned designation for I 575 nbsp SR 419 25 01 40 25 I 85 I 985 SR 365 SR 403 in Suwanee I 985 US 23 SR 365 in Gainesville Unsigned designation for I 985 completely concurrent with SR 365 nbsp SR 421 6 49 10 44 I 516 SR 21 in Garden City I 516 SR 21 in Savannah Unsigned designation for I 516 completely concurrent with SR 21 nbsp SR 422 19 1 30 7 Beltway around Athens Unsigned designation for SR 10 Loop Former Proposed and unbuiltReferences edit a b Google June 19 2013 Overview map of SR 204 Spur Map Google Maps Google Retrieved June 19 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y State Highway Department of Georgia 1946 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 14 2017 Corrected to November 7 1946 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag State Highway Department of Georgia 1948 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 15 2017 Corrected to February 28 1948 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Georgia Department of Transportation 1984 Official Highway and Transportation Map PDF Map 1984 1985 ed Scale not given Atlanta Georgia Department of Transportation Retrieved March 14 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Georgia Department of Transportation 1986 Official Highway and Transportation Map PDF Map 1986 1987 ed Scale not given Atlanta Georgia Department of Transportation Retrieved March 14 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m State Highway Department of Georgia 1954 State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 14 2017 Corrected to June 1 1954 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y State Highway Department of Georgia 1955 State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 14 2017 Corrected to June 1 1955 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as State Highway Department of Georgia 1957 State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 18 2017 Corrected to July 1 1957 a b c d e f g h i j k l State Highway Department of Georgia January 1970 Official Highway Map PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia Retrieved March 27 2017 a b c d e f g h i j State Highway Department of Georgia January 1971 Official Highway Map PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia Retrieved March 14 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r State Highway Department of Georgia January 1 1942 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 15 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa State Highway Department of Georgia January 1 1943 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 16 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Georgia Department of Transportation 1983 Official Highway and Transportation Map PDF Map 1983 1984 ed Scale not given Atlanta Georgia Department of Transportation Retrieved April 1 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n State Highway Department of Georgia January 1 1944 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 16 2017 a b c d e f g h i j State Highway Department of Georgia January 1 1945 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 14 2017 a b c d e f State Highway Department of Georgia July 1 1941 System of State Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 14 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Georgia Department of Transportation January 1977 Official Highway Map PDF Map 1977 1978 ed Scale not given Atlanta Georgia Department of Transportation a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Georgia Department of Transportation January 1977 Official Highway Map PDF Map 1977 1978 ed Scale not given Atlanta Georgia Department of Transportation Retrieved March 24 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq State Highway Department of Georgia 1963 State Highway System and Other Principal Connecting Roads PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia OCLC 5673161 Retrieved March 18 2017 Corrected to June 1 1963 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at State Highway Department of Georgia January 1966 Official Highway Map PDF Map Scale not given Atlanta State Highway Department of Georgia Retrieved March 18 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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