Interstate 75 is an
interstate highway in the midwest and southeastern
United States. It goes from
Florida State Highway 826[?] at
Fort Lauderdale, Florida to
Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan at the Canadian border.
1775
- Fort Lauderdale, Florida
- Tampa, Florida
- Macon, Georgia
- Atlanta, Georgia
- Chattanooga, Tennessee
- Knoxville, Tennessee
- Lexington, Kentucky
- Cincinnati, Ohio
- Detroit, Michigan
- Flint, Michigan
- Interstate 4 in Tampa, Florida
- Interstate 10 in Lake City, Florida
- Interstate 16 in Macon, Georgia
- Interstate 85 in Atlanta, Georgia
- Interstate 20 in Atlanta, Georgia
- Interstate 24 in Chattanooga, Tennessee
- Interstate 40 near Pine Top, Tennessee[?]. They stay merged until Knoxville, Tennessee.
- Interstate 64 in Lexington, Kentucky
- Interstate 71 in Walton, Kentucky. They stay connected until Cincinnati, Ohio.
- Interstate 74 in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Interstate 70 in Dayton, Ohio
- Interstate 80 in Toledo, Ohio
- Interstate 90 in Toledo, Ohio
- Interstate 96 in Detroit, Michigan
- Interstate 94 in Detroit, Michigan
- Interstate 69 in Flint, Michigan
- Tampa, Florida/Saint Petersburg, Florida - I-175, I-275, I-375
- Macon, Georgia - I-475
- Atlanta, Georgia - I-675
- Spur to Ball Ground, Georgia, I-575
- Knoxville, Tennessee - I-275
- Cincinnati, Ohio - I-275
- Dayton, Ohio - I-675
- Toledo, Ohio - I-475
- Detroit, Michigan - I-275, I-375
- Flint, Michigan - I-475
I-75 connects
Canada with the southern tip of
Florida. The
Alligator Alley section west of Ft. Lauderdale is due east/west.
I-375 in Tampa apparently still exists, but it's so small that maps don't always bother labelling it.