This article is part of the highway renumbering series.
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Alabama
|
1928, 1957
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Arkansas
|
1926
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California
|
1964
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Colorado
|
1953, 1968
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Connecticut
|
1932, 1963
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Florida
|
1945
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Indiana
|
1926
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Iowa
|
1926, 1969
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Louisiana
|
1955
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Maine
|
1933
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Massachusetts
|
1933
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Minnesota
|
1934
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Missouri
|
1926
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Montana
|
1932
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Nebraska
|
1926
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Nevada
|
1976
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New Jersey
|
1927, 1953
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New Mexico
|
1988
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New York
|
1927, 1930
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North Carolina
|
1934, 1937, 1940, 1961
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Ohio
|
1923, 1927, 1962
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Pennsylvania
|
1928, 1961
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Puerto Rico
|
1953
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South Carolina
|
1928, 1937
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South Dakota
|
1927, 1975
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Tennessee
|
1983
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Texas
|
1939
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Utah
|
1962, 1977
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Virginia
|
1923, 1928, 1933, 1940, 1958
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Washington
|
1964
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Wisconsin
|
1926
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Wyoming
|
1927
|
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In 1962, the Ohio Department of Highways implemented the system of Interstate Highways that had been approved by the states in 1956.
The State Route numbers 70, 71, 74, 75, 77, 80, 90, 270, 271, 275, 277, 280, 290, 675, and 680 conflicted with new designations, so the State Routes with those numbers were renumbered.[1]
Other renumberings due to new interstate designations after 1962
References