U.S. Route 41
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U.S. Route 41
Summary
U.S. Route 41 is a road[1]. It ranks in the top 0.91% of road entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (223 views/month, #73 of 7,994).[2]
Key Facts
- U.S. Route 41 is located in Florida[3].
- U.S. Route 41 is located in Georgia[4].
- U.S. Route 41 is located in Tennessee[5].
- U.S. Route 41 is located in Kentucky[6].
- U.S. Route 41 is located in Indiana[7].
- U.S. Route 41 is located in Illinois[8].
- U.S. Route 41 is in the country of United States[9].
- U.S. Route 41's traffic sign is recorded as US 41.svg[10].
- U.S. Route 41's route map is recorded as US 41 map.png[11].
- U.S. Route 41's transport network is recorded as United States Numbered Highway System[12].
- U.S. Route 41's transport network is recorded as highways in Kentucky[13].
- U.S. Route 41's transport network is recorded as Tennessee State Route System[14].
- U.S. Route 41's transport network is recorded as Wisconsin State Trunk Highway System[15].
- U.S. Route 41's transport network is recorded as numbered roads in Indiana[16].
- U.S. Route 41's transport network is recorded as state highways in Georgia[17].
- U.S. Route 41's instance of is recorded as road[18].
- U.S. Route 41's maintained by is recorded as Georgia Department of Transportation[19].
- U.S. Route 41's maintained by is recorded as Indiana Department of Transportation[20].
- U.S. Route 41's maintained by is recorded as Kentucky Transportation Cabinet[21].
- U.S. Route 41's maintained by is recorded as Michigan Department of Transportation[22].
- U.S. Route 41's maintained by is recorded as Tennessee Department of Transportation[23].
- U.S. Route 41's maintained by is recorded as Wisconsin Department of Transportation[24].
- U.S. Route 41's owned by is recorded as Georgia Department of Transportation[25].
- U.S. Route 41's owned by is recorded as Indiana Department of Transportation[26].
- U.S. Route 41's owned by is recorded as Kentucky Transportation Cabinet[27].
Body
Geography
U.S. Route 41 is in the country of United States[9]. Located in include Florida[3], an U.S. state[28], in United States[29], founded in 1845[30], headquartered in Tallahassee[31]; Georgia[4], an U.S. state[32], in United States[33], founded in 1788[34]; Tennessee[5], an U.S. state[35], in United States[36], founded in 1796[37]; Kentucky[6], an U.S. state[38], in United States[39], founded in 1792[40]; Indiana[7], an U.S. state[41], in United States[42], founded in 1816[43], headquartered in Indianapolis[44]; and Illinois[8], an U.S. state[45], in United States[46], founded in 1818[47].
Physical Characteristics
U.S. Route 41's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q253276', 'amount': '+2000'}[48].
Designation and Status
U.S. Route 41's instance of is recorded as road[18].
History and Context
+1926-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of U.S. Route 41[49]. Owners include Georgia Department of Transportation[25], a state department of transportation of the United States[50], in United States[51], founded in 1972[52], headquartered in Atlanta[53]; Indiana Department of Transportation[26], a state department of transportation of the United States[54], in United States[55]; Kentucky Transportation Cabinet[27], a state department of transportation of the United States[56], in United States[57], founded in 1912[58], headquartered in Frankfort[59]; Michigan Department of Transportation[60], a state department of transportation of the United States[61], in United States[62], founded in 1905[63], headquartered in Lansing[64]; Tennessee Department of Transportation[65], a state department of transportation of the United States[66], in United States[67], founded in 1915[68], headquartered in James K. Polk State Office Building[69]; and Wisconsin Department of Transportation[70], a state department of transportation of the United States[71], in United States[72], founded in 1967[73], headquartered in Madison[74].
Why It Matters
U.S. Route 41 ranks in the top 0.91% of road entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (223 views/month, #73 of 7,994).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[75] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[76]