New York State Route 25C Explained

State:NY
Type:NY
Route:25C
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:NY 25C highlighted in red (Section renamed NY 900F backed in blue)
Length Mi:4.29
Maint:NYSDOT, NYCDOT, and Nassau County
Established:mid-1930s
Deleted:January 1, 1970
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Queens Village
Junction: in Queens Village
in Queens Village
Direction B:East
Terminus B: in New Hyde Park
Counties:Queens, Nassau
Previous Type:NY
Previous Route:25B
Next Type:NY 1955
Next Route:25D
Spur Type:NY
Spur Of:25

New York State Route 25C (NY 25C) was an east–west state highway on Long Island in New York in the United States. The route began in Queens at an intersection with NY 25 and paralleled NY 25B for just over 4miles before ending at a junction with NY 25B in western Nassau County. NY 25C was assigned in the 1930s and removed in 1970. Part of the route's former routing is still state-maintained as New York State Route 900F, an unsigned reference route.

Route description

NY 25C began at the intersection of Springfield Boulevard and Union Turnpike in the Queens neighborhood of Queens Village. Here, the route connected to NY 25, which entered from the west on Union Turnpike and left to the south on Springfield Boulevard. The route headed to the northeast along the southern edge of the Oakland Gardens neighborhood on the four-lane Union Turnpike, a road often recognized more by its name than by its designation. In its first few blocks, the road passed Alley Pond Park and connected to the Grand Central Parkway by way of an interchange. The route continued on, meeting the nearby Cross Island Parkway at another interchange before heading into the Glen Oaks portion of Queens.

The highway continued on a northeasterly track to the New York City line, where it turned slightly eastward as it crossed into Nassau County. Now in the town of North Hempstead, NY 25C continued to follow Union Turnpike along the northern edge of North New Hyde Park to an intersection with Marcus Avenue. While Union Turnpike ends here, the route continued eastward along the two-lane Marcus Avenue toward Herricks. After several blocks, the road turned southeast to reach Hillside Manor, a neighborhood located on the border between North New Hyde Park and Herricks. NY 25C ended here at a junction with NY 25B (Hillside Avenue).[1]

History

The NY 25C designation was assigned in the mid-1930s to the portion of Marcus Avenue between Hillside Avenue (NY 25B) and the Northern State Parkway.[2] [3] In the 1940s, the northernmost portion of the route was realigned to follow Union Turnpike west into Queens, where it ended at Springfield Boulevard (then NY 25).[4] [5] The section of Union Turnpike from Kew Gardens to the Nassau County line had been converted from a narrow unpaved road to a paved multi-lane highway in the late 1930s ahead of the 1939 New York World's Fair. NY 25C was city-maintained in Queens,[6] state-maintained from the New York City line to Marcus Avenue,[7] and county-maintained from Union Turnpike to NY 25B. The route remained unchanged[8] until January 1, 1970, when the designation was removed.[9] The 0.81miles state-maintained portion of the route's former alignment in Nassau County is now NY 900F, an unsigned reference route.

External links

Notes and References

  1. New York City and Vicinity including Long Island . . 1968 . 1968–69.
  2. Texaco Road Map – New York . . 1933 . Rand McNally and Company.
  3. Road Map – Metropolitan New York and Long Island . . 1936 . H.M. Gousha Company.
  4. New York Info-Map . . 1940 . Rand McNally and Company.
  5. Official Highway Map of New York State . . 1947–48 . General Drafting.
  6. News: Union Turnpike Extension To Be Ready When Fair Opens . Long Island Star-Journal . February 14, 1939 . . 3.
  7. Web site: 2011 Traffic Volume Report for New York State . PDF . December 28, 2012 . September 25, 2012 . 247 . New York State Department of Transportation.
  8. New York State Highways . . 1969 . Rand McNally and Company.
  9. Book: Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State . January 1, 1970 . State of New York Department of Transportation . State of New York Department of Transportation . PDF . December 3, 2009.