Indiana State Road 167 Explained

State:IN
Type:IN
Route:167
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:SR 167 highlighted in red
Length Mi:10.371
Established:1931[1]
Direction A:South
Terminus A: at Albany
Direction B:North
Terminus B: near Hartford City
Counties:Blackford, Delaware, Jay
Previous Type:IN
Previous Route:166
Next Type:IN
Next Route:168

State Road 167 (SR 167) is a State Road in the eastern section of the state of Indiana. Running for 10.371miles in a general north–south direction, connecting the cities of Albany and Dunkirk with SR 26. The entire route is rural two-lane highway that passes through farmland and residential properties. SR 167 was originally introduced in the 1931 routed along its modern routing. The entire was paved by the mid-1960s.

Route description

SR 167 begins at an intersection between Walnut Street (SR 67) and Mississinewa Avenue, in the city of Albany in Delaware County. From there the road continues northeast on Mississinewa Avenue through a mix of residential neighborhoods and farmland for about 1miles before leaving the city of Albany. After leaving Albany SR 167 enters unincorporated Delaware County, passing through rural farmland as a two-lane highway. The road enters Dunkirk following Main Street, passing through the downtown of the city. The street crosses a Norfolk Southern Railway track, before leaving downtown Dunkirk. North of downtown Main Street curves due north near the West Jay County Middle School and forms the border between Blackford and Jay Counties. The SR 167 designation ends at an intersection with SR 26 east of Hartford City, but the roadway continues north as a county road.

No segment of State Road 167 in Indiana is included in the National Highway System (NHS). The NHS is a network of highways that are identified as being most important for the economy, mobility and defense of the nation. The highway is maintained by the Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) like all other state roads in the state. The department tracks the traffic volumes along all state roads as a part of its maintenance responsibilities using a metric called average annual daily traffic (AADT). This measurement is a calculation of the traffic level along a segment of roadway for any average day of the year. In 2013, the department's traffic surveys showed that on average, 4324 vehicles used the highway daily along Main Street on the south end of Dunkirk and 784 vehicles did so each day near the northern end of SR 167, the highest and lowest counts along the highway, respectively.

History

SR 167 was first designated in 1931. The original routing started in Albany and ran north through Dunkirk to SR 26 much as it does today.[1] The entire road was either gravel or stone surface, until 1940 when the state highway commissioned desired to paved the road south of Dunkirk.[2] This paving was completed by 1942. The segment of road north of Dunkirk was paved between 1962 and 1963.

References

  1. News: Maintenance on 391. The Franklin Evening Star . September 25, 1931 . 3 . October 20, 2016. Newspapers.com.
  2. News: . Bids Requested on 58 Miles of State Highway Pavement . The Daily Clintonian . Clinton . 6 . August 8, 1940 . Newspapers.com . October 27, 2016.