State Route 41 is a north-south state highway in the southern and western portions of the U.S. state of Ohio. Its southern terminus is at U.S. Route 52, US 62 Business, and US 68 Business in Aberdeen. ; and its northern terminus is along SR 48 at US 36 in Covington. Throughout its southern portion the route is quite hilly as it passes predominantly northward through scenic areas with state parks and monuments. Along its northern portion the route heads in a more westerly direction across mainly flat terrain as a major road through the cities of Washington Court House, Springfield, and Troy.
Route description
The portion of SR 41 between Covington and Washington Road, just outside Troy, is designated as the "Sheriff's Sgt. Robert "Bobby" Elliott Memorial Highway", in honor of a Miami County sheriff's sergeant who was shot and killed by a prisoner he was guarding on February 25, 1987.
History
1924 – Original route established; originally routed from Manchester to west of Bainbridge along the current State Route 136 from Manchester to Bentonville, and along its current alignment from Bentonville to west of Bainbridge.
1931 – Southern terminus moved to Aberdeen; routed along previously unnumbered roads ; Manchester to Bentonville certified as State Route 136; northern terminus also moved to east of Greenfield.
1962 – Extended to Covington along the former State Route 70.
1997 – west of Springfield to west of Springfield upgraded to divided highway.
unknown – Extended to the Kentuckystate line on the Ohio River along the previous alignment of the U.S. Route 62/U.S. Route 68 concurrency. SR 41 has since been truncated back to US 52 and Market Place in Aberdeen.
On November 9, 2012, the Clark County-Springfield Transportation Coordinating Committee announced that a roundabout would be constructed at the intersection of SR 41 and SR 235 in Pike Township, which has been the site of numerous vehicle crashes, including five fatalities from 1992 to 2013. Construction on the $1.1 million project began in June 2014 and was completed the weekend before Monday, September 15. It is the first roundabout in Clark County and is believed to be the first in Ohio with all approaches at high speed,.