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Ohio State Route 190

State Route 190 marker

State Route 190
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length: 8.93 mi (14.37 km)
Existed: 1923 – present
Major junctions
South end: SR 66 / SR 697 in Delphos
North end: US 224 near Ottoville
Location
Counties: Allen, Putnam
Highway system
SR 189 SR 191

State Route 190 marker

State Route 190 (SR 190) is a 8.93-mile-long (14.37 km) north–south state highway in the western portion of the U.S. state of Ohio. The southern terminus of SR 190 is at an intersection with SR 66 in Delphos. Its northern terminus is at an intersection with US 224 approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Ottoville.

SR 190 designation was applied in the mid 1920s, to some of the same route as today, the rest was SR 106. A year after its designation it was extended, replacing a section of SR 106. The last section of road was paved in the late 1930s.

Along its path, SR 190 passes through the northern portion of Allen County and the western portion of Putnam County. There are no segments of SR 190 that are included as a part of the National Highway System.

SR 190 begins in Delphos, where SR 66 and SR 697. SR 190 heads east concurrent with SR 66, on East 5th Street. Here, SR 190 has its highest traffic counts; within the 2011 ODOT survey, the road is listed with an average annual daily traffic(AADT) of 5,780 vehicles on a section of highway that is concurrent with SR 66. The road passes through downtown Delphos and mostly residential properties, as a four-lane highway. The highway turns north onto Fort Jennings Road, ending its concurrency with SR 66. Fort Jennings Road heads north through residential properties, as a two-lane highway. SR 190 leaves Delphos and enters rural Allen County, before entering rural Putnam County. The route passes under U.S. Route 30 (US 30), before curving northeast. The road enters Fort Jennings and parallels the Auglaize River.


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