The roadway that would eventually become SR 213 was built between 1921 and the end of 1926 as an unnumbered road from
SR 11 in
Social Circle to
SR 12 southeast of the city. Its entire length had a "sand clay or top soil" surface. In 1930, it was designated as
SR 60. In 1937, part of
SR 142 was established on a path from
Farrar to
Newborn. At the end of 1940, SR 60 was redesignated as
SR 181. The segment of SR 142 was under construction. At the end of the next year, SR 181 was redesignated as SR 213. The next year, SR 213 was designated on a southern segment. It extended from
SR 36 south of
Covington, then southeast and east to SR 11 in
Mansfield. It may have also been designated from Mansfield east-northeast to SR 142 in Newborn and then north-northwest to SR 12 east of Covington; however, these segments were not specifically designated on maps. The SR 142 segment had a sand clay or top soil surface. By the end of 1946, the northern segment of SR 213 was redesignated as
SR 229, which was also designated on the segment of roadway from Newborn to east of Covington. The Mansfield–Newborn segment of SR 213 was hard surfaced. By the end of 1948, SR 213 was extended east-southeast from Newborn to
SR 83 in
Pennington. From its western terminus to just west-southwest of Mansfield, and from east-southeast of Newborn to Pennington, the highway had a "sand clay, top soil, or stabilized earth" surface. From just west-southwest of Mansfield to east-southeast of Newborn, which included the SR 142 segment (with which SR 213 had a brief
concurrency), it was hard surfaced. In 1953, the segment of SR 213 from east-southeast of Newborn to Pennington was hard surfaced. From its western terminus to just west of Mansfield, it had completed grading, but was not surfaced. Between 1955 and the middle of 1957, the western end of SR 213 was paved. At the end of the 1950s, all of the highway was paved. In 1972, SR 213 was extended southward from
Pennington to
Eatonton. In 1982, SR 213 was
decommissioned. == Major intersections ==