List of highways in Warren County, New York explained

Map:Warren County NY map.svg
Map Notes:Map of Warren County's highway system
Interstate:Interstate X (I-X)
Us:U.S. Route X (US X)
Statehwy:New York State Route X (NY X)
Label1:County:
Field1:County Route X (CR X)
Links:NY

The highway system of Warren County, New York, comprises of roads maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation, the county, and its towns and villages. Fourteen state-maintained highways enter the county, which account for a combined of the state highway mileage in New York. The state roads are supplemented by of county-maintained highways. Most roads within the county are short connectors, while others are sections of 30miles long highways. Warren County is served by one Interstate Highway, I-87, also known as the Adirondack Northway; one United States Numbered Highway, US 9; eight state-numbered signed touring routes; three state-maintained reference routes, all of which are unsigned; and 81 county-maintained routes, most of which are short connectors between more major roads.

The longest state route within the county is NY 9N, which runs for 48.58miles within Warren County. The shortest state-maintained route is NY 911E, a 0.2miles reference route just east of the city of Glens Falls. The state highways in Warren County serve many of the county's major municipalities, including Glens Falls, the towns of Warrensburg and Queensbury, and the village of Lake George.

Highways

Interstate and US Highways

I-87 is the only Interstate Highway that enters Warren County. It travels for 38.53miles within the county and has nine interchanges along the way.[1] Exits off the highway serve Glens Falls, Queensbury, Warrensburg, Lake George, Bolton Landing, and Chestertown. The highway once terminated in downtown Lake George, with its former two-lane end becoming NY 912Q after the highway was extended northward.

There have been two U.S. Highways in Warren County. The longest - and the only current one - is US 9, which spans for over 40.43miles within the county.[2] Since its designation in 1926,[3] US 9 services the city of Glens Falls, Queensbury, the village of Lake George, Warrensburg and Chestertown before leaving for Essex County. US 9 once had four suffixed routes in the county;[4] however, only two still exist. Also assigned in 1926 was US 4, which initially terminated in Glens Falls at US 9. It was realigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to follow the Hudson River south from Hudson Falls to the Capital District, bypassing Warren County to the east.[5] [6]

State touring routes and scenic byways

Touring routes are signed with black and white route markers, and small, green reference markers are posted along the state-maintained sections of the routes. There have been 18 state signed touring routes in Warren County since the modern state touring system was established in 1924; however, only 10 of them remain. Three routes created in 1924—NY 6, NY 10, and NY 30—entered the Warren County limits, crossing the county in a north–south manner.[7] Another route, NY 47, was assigned by 1926 to an alignment extending from Chestertown to Ticonderoga via Hague.[8] NY 6 was replaced by US 9 in 1927,[9] and the three other routes were realigned out of the county or eliminated as part of the 1930 renumbering.[10]

The post-renumbering state route system in Warren County was identical to the current route layout, save for a handful of routes. In the 1930 renumbering, NY 9K was assigned to NY 10's former routing between Saratoga Springs and Lake George while NY 47 was reassigned to a highway between Lake George village and Hague that ran along the western shore of Lake George. NY 9N, meanwhile, initially began in Elizabethtown, Essex County. That route was extended south twice: first to Lake George, replacing NY 47;[11] [12] and again to Saratoga Springs in the early 1950s, supplanting NY 9K.[13] [14] Also assigned in the renumbering was NY 32B, an alternate route of NY 32 that began in Glens Falls and followed the Hudson River east into Washington County. NY 9M, a north–south spur connecting US 9 to NY 8, was assigned by the following year,[15] but eliminated .[16] [17]

By 1940, NY 32 was extended into Warren County, passing through Glens Falls and Queensbury on its way to a terminus in Washington County.[18] NY 32B initially overlapped with NY 32 along Warren Street; however, it was truncated eastward to begin in Queensbury [19] [20] and eliminated . It was partially replaced by NY 254, a northeasterly bypass of Glens Falls from I-87 to Washington County.[21] [22]

Of the 10 current routes, NY 418 in Warrensburg is the shortest while NY 9N is the longest. Other active routes in Warren County include NY 8, which spans the northern part of the county; NY 9L, a short suffixed route of US 9; NY 149, a connector from I-87 to the Vermont border in Warren and nearby Washington Counties; NY 28, which serves western Warren County and terminates in Johnsburg; and its suffixed route, NY 28N, which ends in the western part of the county.

There are 13 New York State Scenic Byways in the Adirondacks alone, three of them in Warren County. The first is the Roosevelt–Marcy Trail, which runs on NY 28N.[23] The second is the Dude Ranch Trail, a loop in Warren and nearby Saratoga counties,[24] and the third is the Central Adirondack Trail, which utilizes parts of NY 9L, US 9 and NY 28.[25]

State reference routes

There are three state-maintained reference routes in Warren County. A reference route is a road owned by the state but are signed only with reference markers. The shortest of these is NY 911E, an east–west highway connecting NY 32 to NY 254. The route is the only portion of NY 32B's former alignment in Warren County that did not become part of NY 254. Although it is the shortest reference route in the county, the New York State Department of Transportation has reserved NY 656, a replacement touring route designation, for the highway. A date for the renumbering has not been determined.[26] The longest of Warren County's three reference routes is NY 917A, better known as the Prospect Mountain Veterans Memorial Highway. The final reference route is NY 912Q, a two lane freeway spur leading east from I-87 exit 22.[27] [28]

County routes

There are 81 county-maintained roads in Warren County. Most are short connectors between major roadways, although a few are former state roads. A few examples are CR 64 and CR 62, both of which were part of NY 9M during the 1930s, and CR 79, which was part of NY 32 until 1981.[29] [30] In some cases, a single county route designation has been assigned to several different highways. An example is CR 11, which begins at an intersection with CR 10 just east of the Northway (I-87) in Chestertown, but splits into two east of Riverbank. Until 2009, Warren County Routes were not signed like normal touring routes; instead, they were marked with tab-like signs mounted on the back of poles. There was one exception, as CR 23 was signed as a normal county route would.[31]

In November 2007, locals of Warren County produced concern that the salt used on several county highways including CR 7, CR 11, and CR 35 was starting to harm the fragile environment of Lake George and the surrounding area. The Warren County Highway Department uses an average of 9000ST of salt on the roads around the Lake George area annually. The salt is beginning to flow into the lake, causing a harmful environmental impact. Since the amount of salt in Lake George has doubled since the 1980s, the highway department switched from using sand entirely to using salt for safety of drivers, rather than the environment. Local officials recognize the problem at hand and are trying to find ways to minimize salt usage.[32]

In late 2009, Warren County DPW began adding the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices-standard pentagon shield to their county roads. At first, signage was generally limited to the terminus of a single road, and roads were not signed at intersections with other county or state roads or when numbers change. By 2016, Warren County had placed signs at most, if not all, locations where numbers change, as well as some junction assemblies where routes intersect, such as on southbound CR 58 (West Mountain Road) approaching CR 28 (Corinth Road).

List of Interstate, US, and state highways

The chart below shows current Interstate, U.S., and state highways by year of creation, length, and towns crossed. "Formed" displays the year or time period in which the route was assigned; "Length" shows the highway's total length in Warren County.

RouteFormedLengthTowns crossed
mikm
1957[33] 38.53milesQueensbury, Lake George, Warrensburg, Chester
192640.43milesGlens Falls, Queensbury, Lake George, Warrensburg, Chester
193046.79milesChester, Johnsburg
193018.58milesQueensbury, Lake George
193048.58milesLake Luzerne, Lake George, Bolton, Hague
193021.23milesChester, Warrensburg
19304.54milesNorth Creek
19302.88milesGlens Falls, Queensbury
19305.9milesQueensbury
5.34milesQueensbury
19303.5milesWarrensburg
NY 911E0.2milesQueensbury
NY 912Q19670.66milesLake George
NY 917A1969[34] 5.88milesLake George

List of county routes

The chart below covers the county routes in Warren County. The county route system was established in February 1968.[35] Route numbers, lengths, and termini were derived from the 2010 NYSDOT Warren County inventory unless otherwise noted.[36]

RouteLength
(mi)
Length
(km)
FromViaToNotes
[37] 0.9miles south of NY 8Riverside Station Road in JohnsburgNY 8Former number; now town-maintained
2.73milesCR 3 at Stony Creek town lineStony Creek Road in ThurmanCR 4
6.53milesBecomes CR 22 0.27miles north of CR 76Harrisburg and Warrensburg Roads in Stony CreekCR 2 at Thurman town line
7.82milesNY 418Stony Creek and Athol Roads, High Street, Mountain and Valley Roads in ThurmanCR 57 at Garnet Lake Road
0.27milesCR 9Fourth Avenue in WarrensburgUS 9
0.56milesUS 9Fort George Road in Lake GeorgeCR 51
0.19milesLake George Beach State ParkBeach Road in Lake GeorgeNY 9LUnsigned
8.42milesGlens Falls city lineBay Road in QueensburyNY 9L
6.69milesNY 28Friends Lake Road in ChesterUS 9 / NY 8
1.35milesCR 40 at Fish Hatchery RoadHudson and Elm Streets in WarrensburgNY 418 / CR 45
11.07milesUS 9Horicon Avenue and Schroon River Road in WarrensburgCR 30 at Chester town line
4.67milesCR 10 in WarrensburgBolton Landing–Riverbank RoadNY 9N in Bolton
4.29milesCR 11 (segment 1)Valley Woods Road in BoltonNY 9N
3.02milesSaratoga County line (becomes CR 1)Hadley Road in Stony CreekCR 3
6.26milesCR 4The Glen–Athol Road in ThurmanNY 28
0.38milesCR 60 at Judd BridgeRiver Street in WarrensburgNY 418
0.7milesNY 418Milton Street and Library Avenue in WarrensburgCR 9
0.06milesCR 9Stewart Farrar Street in WarrensburgUS 9
4.27milesCR 62 / CR 64East Shore Drive in HoriconBeaver Pond Road
5.34milesCR 44Bay Road and East River Drive in Lake LuzerneSaratoga County line (becomes CR 9)
3.9milesUS 9Round Pond, Blind Rock, and Haviland Roads in QueensburyNY 9L
0.25milesNY 9NSagamore Road in BoltonBridge over Lake George
4.86milesEssex County line (becomes CR 29)Olmstedville Road in ChesterUS 9
4.68milesNY 8West Hague Road in HagueEssex County line (becomes CR 38)
2.25milesEssex County line (becomes CR 38)West Hague Road in HagueNY 9N
0.8milesCR 21New Hague Road in HagueEssex County line (becomes CR 11)
8.6milesBridge over Halfway BrookHarrisburg Road in Stony CreekBecomes CR 3 0.27miles north of CR 76
0.31milesInfirmary RoadGurney Lane in QueensburyUS 9
0.36milesUS 9Mountain Avenue, King Street, and Hackensack Avenue in WarrensburgUS 9Unsigned
0.37milesCR 11 (segment 2)Brook Street and Goodman Avenue in BoltonNY 9N
7.69milesNY 8Palisades Road in HoriconNY 8
1.2milesCR 11 (segment 2)Federal Hill Road in BoltonCR 41 at Frank Cameron Road
5.2milesCR 32 at Lake Luzerne town lineCorinth Road and Main Street in QueensburyGlens Falls city line
4.23milesNY 8Peaceful Valley Road in JohnsburgNY 28
0.2milesNY 28Peaceful Valley Road in JohnsburgCR 77
3.66milesCR 10 at Warrensburg town lineSchroon River Road in ChesterCR 53 at bridge over Schroon River
1.84milesCR 30 in ChesterHoricon AvenueNY 8 in Horicon
5.26milesCR 16Call Street in Lake LuzerneCR 28 at Queensbury town line
0.23milesNY 8Market Street in HoriconNY 8
0.94milesUS 9Glenwood Avenue in QueensburyCR 7
3.89milesUS 9Diamond Point–Bakers Crossing Road in Lake GeorgeNY 9N
3.8milesCR 4Valley Road in ThurmanCR 13
0.12milesRed Wing RoadBeaver Pond Road in HoriconCR 55
0.68milesNY 9LPilot Knob Road in QueensburyWashington County line (becomes CR 32)
1.05milesNY 9L / CR 54Sunnyside East Road in QueensburyWashington County line (becomes CR 35)
3.89milesCR 9 at Fish Hatchery RoadGolf Course Road in WarrensburgNY 28
4.28milesCR 27 at Frank Cameron RoadFederal Hill, Sawmill, and North Bolton Roads in BoltonCR 11 (segment 1)
0.73milesGlens Falls city lineDix Avenue in QueensburyNY 32
0.15milesRiverside DriveChurch Street in ChesterUS 9
0.52milesSaratoga County line (becomes CR 4)Bridge, Main, and Mill Streets in Lake LuzerneNY 9N
0.17milesUS 9Water Street in WarrensburgNY 418 / CR 9
4.03milesNY 28 in WarrensburgPotter Brook and Atateka DrivesCR 8 in Chester
0.61milesUS 9Quaker Road in QueensburyCR 34Entire length overlaps with NY 254
1.12milesSouth Trout Lake RoadLamb Hill Road in BoltonEast end of county maintenance
2.22milesWest end of county maintenanceTrout Lake Road in BoltonNY 9N
0.12milesCR 10County Home Bridge Road in WarrensburgBridge over Schroon River
4.04milesNY 9NCoolidge Hill Road in BoltonCR 48 (segment 2)
1.29milesNY 8Sunset Drive in HagueCR 21
0.51milesUS 9Beach Road in Lake GeorgeCR 6Unsigned
3.63milesCR 79Queensbury Avenue and Hicks Road in QueensburyNY 9L
0.99milesCR 30 at bridge over Schroon RiverWatering Tub Road in HoriconNY 8
0.95milesCR 7 / CR 63Sunnyside Road in QueensburyNY 9L / CR 39
6.86milesCR 53Valentine Pond Road in HoriconCR 37
2.83milesUS 9 / NY 8White School House–Butternut Flats Road in ChesterUS 9
6.84milesCR 4 at Garnet Lake Road in ThurmanSouth Johnsburg RoadNY 8 in Johnsburg
5.92milesCR 28West Mountain Road in QueensburyCR 23
1.74milesUS 9Bloody Pond Road in Lake GeorgeNY 9L
3.6milesNY 9NOld Stage Road in Lake LuzerneWarrensburg town line
3.44milesCross RoadHarrington Hill Road in WarrensburgCR 14 at Judd Bridge
0.76milesCR 15 / CR 64 in HoriconGlendale RoadUS 9 in ChesterFormerly part of NY 9M
1.17milesNY 149Moon Hill Road in QueensburyCR 7 / CR 54
3.94milesCR 55East Schroon River Road in HoriconCR 15 / CR 62Formerly part of NY 9M
1.43milesCR 8Knapp Hill Road in ChesterRiverside Drive
1.39milesCR 47Country Club Road in QueensburyCR 17
1.15milesCR 2Cameron Road in ThurmanCR 4
4.89milesNY 8Landon Hill Road in ChesterUS 9
0.29milesUS 9West Brook Road in Lake GeorgeCR 51Unsigned
3.33milesCR 34Quaker Road in QueensburyNY 911EEntire length overlaps with NY 254
0.95milesFlat Rock RoadStone School House Road in Lake GeorgeNY 9N
8.33milesBridge over Pine Ridge Brook in ThurmanGarnet Lake RoadNY 8 in Johnsburg
1.3milesGore MountainGore Mountain Road in JohnsburgCR 29
1.82milesCR 8Atateka Drive in ChesterCR 46
1.29milesCR 56Ben Culver Road in ChesterCR 68
5.68milesCR 3 in Stony CreekLanfear, Murray, and Dartmouth Roads and High StreetCR 4 in Thurman
1.81milesNY 28Main Street in JohnsburgNY 28Former routing of NY 28
3.4milesBeach RoadThirteenth Lake Road in JohnsburgNY 28
0.84milesNY 32 / NY 911EBoulevard in QueensburyWashington County line (becomes CR 75)Former routing of NY 32
0.14milesNY 28NCircle Avenue in JohnsburgCR 77Unsigned
0.15milesDead endRailroad Place in JohnsburgCR 77Unsigned
0.11milesNY 28Ski Bowl Road in JohnsburgCR 77Unsigned
0.04milesThe Great Escape & Splashwater KingdomSix Flags Drive in QueensburyUS 9Unsigned

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2006 Traffic Data Report for New York State . July 16, 2007 . PDF . New York State Department of Transportation . May 7, 2008.
  2. 1977–2007 I Love New York State Map . 2007 . I Love New York.
  3. . . November 11, 1926 . United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials . 1:7,000,000 . Washington, DC . . 32889555 . November 7, 2013 . . amp.
  4. Texaco Road Map – New York . . 1932 . Rand McNally and Company.
  5. New York in Soconyland . 1929 . . General Drafting.
  6. Road Map of New York . 1930 . Standard Oil Company of New York . General Drafting.
  7. News: New York's Main Highways Designated by Numbers . . December 21, 1924 . XX9.
  8. Official Map Showing State Highways and other important roads . 1926 . . Rand McNally and Company.
  9. Book: Automobile Blue Book . Automobile Blue Book, Inc . Chicago . 1927 . 1927 . 1. This edition shows U.S. Routes as they were first officially signed in 1927.
  10. News: Dickinson . Leon A. . New Signs for State Highways . The New York Times . January 12, 1930 . 136.
  11. Road Map & Historical Guide – New York . . 1935 . Rand McNally and Company.
  12. New York . . 1936 . General Drafting.
  13. New York . . Rand McNally and Company . 1952.
  14. New York with Special Maps of Putnam–Rockland–Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region . . General Drafting . 1955–56 . 1954.
  15. New York . . 1931 . H.M. Gousha Company.
  16. Book: Thibodeau, William A. . The ALA Green Book . 1938–39 . 1938 . Automobile Legal Association.
  17. New York . Standard Oil Company . 1939 . General Drafting.
  18. New York . Esso . 1940 . General Drafting.
  19. New York and Metropolitan New York . Sunoco . H.M. Gousha Company . 1961 . 1961–62.
  20. New York and Metropolitan New York . . 1962 . Rand McNally and Company.
  21. New York and Metropolitan New York . Sinclair Oil Corporation . 1964 . Rand McNally and Company.
  22. New York . . Rand McNally and Company . 1965.
  23. Web site: Roosevelt–Marcy Trail . . 2007 . May 9, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080602120649/http://www.byways.org/explore/byways/2217/ . June 2, 2008 . dead . mdy-all .
  24. Web site: Dude Ranch Trail . United States Department of Transportation . 2007 . May 9, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080602120658/http://www.byways.org/explore/byways/2220/ . June 2, 2008 . dead . mdy-all .
  25. Web site: Central Adirondack Trail . United States Department of Transportation . 2007 . May 9, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080602120722/http://www.byways.org/explore/byways/2224/ . June 2, 2008 . dead . mdy-all .
  26. Book: Official Description of Highway Touring Routes, Bicycling Touring Routes, Scenic Byways, & Commemorative/Memorial Designations in New York State . New York State Department of Transportation . January 2012 . PDF . February 16, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130729075940/https://www.dot.ny.gov/divisions/operating/oom/transportation-systems/repository/2012%20tour-bk.pdf . July 29, 2013 .
  27. Web site: Schroon Lake 1804 - 2004. May 7, 2008. Adirondack Gold Pages. 2008.
  28. News: Margaret . Lamy . Big Gaps Are Being Closed in the Link Between the Thruway and Canada . May 7, 2008 . . May 18, 1966.
  29. Hudson Falls Quadrangle – New York . . 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic) . 1966 . 1:24,000 . February 5, 2011.
  30. Web site: New York State Legislature . New York State Legislature . New York State Highway Law § 341 . February 5, 2011.
  31. Web site: Warren County Roads . Nathan . Perry . May 7, 2008 . Empire State Roads . https://web.archive.org/web/20140116200803/http://www.empirestateroads.com/cr/crwarren.html . January 16, 2014 . dead .
  32. News: Salting roads draws concern . Feigl . Charles . November 30, 2007 . . . January 17, 2009.
  33. . . August 14, 1957.
  34. News: Missing veterans honored on mountaintop . The Post-Star . Glens Falls, New York . June 4, 2007 . June 13, 2008 .
  35. News: Order of the County Superintendent of Highways Establishing Through Highways and Stop or Yield Intersections in the County of Warren, State of New York. The Warrensburg-Lake George News. February 5, 1970. 14. August 8, 2016.
  36. Web site: Warren County Inventory Listing . March 2, 2010 . New York State Department of Transportation . CSV . February 4, 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130408115636/https://www.dot.ny.gov/divisions/engineering/technical-services/hds-repository2/INV_2010-03-02_warren.csv . April 8, 2013 .
  37. North Creek Digital Raster Quadrangle . New York State Department of Transportation . 1992 . 1:24,000 . February 4, 2011.