Ohio

Type Description Date
[icons/icon_arrow.png] I-70 exit 14, OH 503. The three-digit version of the Ohio state route marker looks to me much more like a torn piece of paper than the outline of the Ohio border. 2006-05-19
[icons/icon_arrow.png] Button-copy overheads for OH 49 northwest of Dayton. 49 is multiplexed with I-70 for the 2-1/4 miles between the exits shown here. 2006-05-18
[icons/icon_arrow.png] Mileage sign for Dayton exits from I-70 with a button I-75 shield. Ohio seems to have kept using these after other states changed to using "peel-and-stick." 2006-05-18
[icons/icon_arrow.png] Seemingly old, all-button overhead at the I-70 onramp from Main St. in Englewood, west of Dayton. It appears that the overpass is newer than the sign attached to it. 2004-05-15
[icons/icon_arrow.png] Overhead for I-70 from US 40 in the town of New Paris, itself adjacent to the city of Richmond, Indiana. The interchange referenced by this sign is actually located footsteps across the border in Indiana. This sign is obviously an Ohio production, however, because Indiana always uses the strange-looking "Columbus OH." phrase as the control for eastbound I-70, apparently to prevent confusion with Columbus, Indiana. 2006-05-19
[icons/icon_shield.png] If you have ever been to the Dayton Hamvention, you have surely seen these shields. They are at the end of Basore Road, in the community of Shiloh. 2006-05-19
[icons/icon_scene.png] Dayton is one of only six cities in the U.S. still operating trolleybuses, electric buses powered by overhead wires. In this shot you can see one of their buses as well as the conducting apparatus. The two wires over the middle of the lane are distinctive and are seen on many busy streets in Dayton. This shot was taken on Main Street. 2006-05-18

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