Route information | ||||
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Maintained by INDOT | ||||
Length | 157 mi (253 km) | |||
Existed | October 1, 1926[4]–present | |||
Southern segment | ||||
Length | 96 mi[1] (154 km) | |||
South end | SR 66 in Tell City | |||
Major intersections | ||||
North end | I-69 near Bloomington | |||
Central segment | ||||
Length | 46.6 mi[2] (75.0 km) | |||
South end | I-69 in Fishers | |||
North end | SR 9 in Marion | |||
Northern segment | ||||
Length | 14.4 mi[3] (23.2 km) | |||
South end | I-469 / US 24 / US 30 in Fort Wayne | |||
Major intersections | SR 101 in Springfield Township | |||
North end | SR 2 in Scipio Township | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Indiana | |||
Counties | Perry, Crawford, Orange, Lawrence, Monroe, Hamilton, Madison, Grant, Allen | |||
Highway system | ||||
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State Road 37 (SR 37) is a major route in the U.S. state of Indiana, running as a four-lane divided highway for a majority of its course in Southern and Central Indiana.
At one time, the route ran from the southwest corner of the state to the northeast corner. In the pre-Interstate Highway era, SR 37 was the most direct route between Fort Wayne and Indianapolis. Interstate 69 (I-69) has supplanted it as a through route, and SR 37 now consists of three disconnected segments, with the segment through Indianapolis being replaced entirely by I-69 in 2024. The longer segment starts at Tell City on the Ohio River and ends in Bloomington in south central Indiana. Another shorter segment resumes off I-69 and runs northeast to SR 9 in Marion. The other segment in northeastern Indiana runs from I-469 near Fort Wayne to the Ohio state line.