fbpx
Wikipedia

New York State Route 120

New York State Route 120 (NY 120) is a state highway in southern Westchester County, New York, in the United States. It begins in the city of Rye at an intersection with U.S. Route 1 (US 1) and runs for about 18 miles (29 km) north to the hamlet of Millwood, where it ends at a junction with NY 100. The route intersects with Interstate 684 (I-684) and the Saw Mill River Parkway, and serves the Westchester County Airport in North Castle. Portions of the route have been signed ceremonially in remembrance of American serviceman killed in the 2000s and 2010s during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

New York State Route 120

Map of the lower Hudson Valley with NY 120 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT and the city of Rye
Length18.03 mi[1] (29.02 km)
Existed1930[2]–present
Major junctions
South end US 1 in Rye
Major intersections I-287 / NY 120A in Purchase
Hutchinson River Parkway in Purchase
I-684 in West Harrison
NY 22 in Armonk
Saw Mill River Parkway in Chappaqua
North end NY 100 in Millwood
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesWestchester
Highway system

NY 120 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, but only to the portion of its routing north of Westchester Avenue. It was extended south to Rye c. 1938, then rerouted to follow Westchester Avenue east to Port Chester by the following year. Most of NY 120's former routing to Rye became part of New York State Route 119A at that time. NY 120 was rerouted to serve Rye again in October 1960, replacing NY 119A.

Route description edit

Rye to Harrison edit

NY 120 begins at an intersection with US 1 (Boston Post Road) in the city of Rye. The route proceeds northward along Purchase Street as a two-lane street through the Locust Avenue Business District, intersecting a handful of local streets and serving Rye's station on the Metro-North Railroad's New Haven Line. Past the station, the highway passes under the New Haven Line, Amtrak's Northeast Corridor line, and I-95 in quick succession ahead of the Purchase Street Business District. The commercial surroundings give way to residential neighborhoods after three blocks as NY 120 winds northward through the northern part of Rye to the adjacent village/town of Harrison.[3]

In Harrison, NY 120 passes several mansions on both sides of the highway as it gradually turns northwestward and approaches I-287 (the Cross Westchester Expressway). The route parallels the western edge of the freeway for several blocks to Westchester Avenue, where NY 120 meets the southern end of NY 120A, an alternate route through the easternmost part of Westchester County. While NY 120A heads east toward Port Chester, NY 120 takes on the Westchester Avenue name as the two directions of the route split to follow collector/distributor roads running northwestward along both sides of I-287. The route remains on the frontage roads for about a half-mile (0.8 km) to another section of Purchase Street, where NY 120 turns to follow a slightly more northward track through another residential section of Harrison.[3]

 
NY 120 northbound approaching the junction with NY 22 on the shores of the Kensico Reservoir in North Castle

Less than 1 mile (1.6 km) from I-287, NY 120 connects to the Hutchinson River Parkway by way of exit 27, a diamond interchange just northeast of the parkway's interchanges with I-287 and a reference route spur leading to I-684. Continuing northward from the parkway, the highway enters the hamlet of Purchase, where NY 120 runs along the eastern edge of Manhattanville College's campus and passes a short distance west of the State University of New York at Purchase.[3] Part of Purchase Street near the entrance to SUNY Purchase at Anderson Hill Road is named the Specialist Anthony N. Kalladeen Memorial Highway in memory of United States Army Specialist Anthony Kalladeen, a SUNY Purchase student who was killed in Iraq in 2004.[4][5] A dormitory at the school is also named for him.[6]

Another stretch of homes north of Purchase leads to Westchester County Airport, situated between NY 120 and the New York–Connecticut state line about 1 mile (1.6 km) to the east. Here, NY 120 begins to run alongside I-684 as a four-lane undivided expressway and both roads pass by Rye Lake, an offshoot of the Kensico Reservoir. NY 120 meets the airport's main entrance in the town of North Castle, where the road connects to I-684 via Airport Road (unsigned County Route 135 or CR 135), where NY 120 becomes a two-lane surface road.[3]

North Castle to Millwood edit

Continuing northward, I-684 and NY 120 head due north toward the state line, where NY 120A rejoins its parent route at a junction with King Street just north of the airport. From here, I-684 continues north into Connecticut while NY 120 takes on the King Street name and turns northwest to straddle the state line for roughly 1 mile (1.6 km). The route passes over I-684 and the northern tip of Rye Lake and serves an industrial complex in the Connecticut town of Greenwich before the state line turns 90 degrees to the northeast. NY 120 remains on a northwesterly alignment, however, and it crosses the Delaware Aqueduct prior to meeting NY 22 (Mount Kisco Road) on the edge of another Kensico Reservoir inlet. The two routes briefly overlap to cross the inlet on a causeway before splitting on the water body's north shore. From here, NY 120 heads through substantially less developed, mostly wooded areas as it traverses the northeastern edge of the reservoir.[3]

North of the reservoir, NY 120 crosses the northernmost part of the Bronx River and traverses the northeastern corner of the town of Mount Pleasant, where the woods give way to a handful of residential neighborhoods. The transition in surroundings continues into the adjacent town of New Castle, home to housing tracts that become less isolated as the road veers westward toward the hamlet of Chappaqua. NY 120 proceeds west through residential and commercial areas to Chappaqua's central business district, where it meets the community's main north–south route, NY 117 (Bedford Road). NY 120 heads north through the center of Chappaqua, overlapping with NY 117 to reach another section of King Street one block to the north. Past NY 117, NY 120 continues generally westward through Chappaqua, changing names to Quaker Road a short distance east of Chappaqua's station on the Metro-North Railroad's Harlem Line.[3]

 
NY 120 southbound along concurrency with NY 133 in Millwood

After crossing the Harlem Line, the route dips under the Saw Mill River Parkway and intersects two parallel local streets leading to the parkway's exit 32. NY 120 turns northward here, crossing over the Saw Mill River and leaving Chappaqua for less densely populated areas of the town of New Castle. At 0.6 miles (0.97 km) north of Chappaqua early 19th-century farmhouses that clustered around the Quaker meeting house that was then the center of Chappaqua, line the road. Today these are listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Old Chappaqua Historic District.[7]

Roughly 1.5 miles (2.4 km) past the historic district, NY 120 makes a gradual turn to the west to reach a junction with NY 133 (Millwood Road). NY 120 turns onto NY 133, following Millwood Road westward into the hamlet of Millwood and its commercial center.[3] Here, the two routes cross the right-of-way of the former Putnam Division of the New York Central Railroad and pass by the site of Millwood's station, which was demolished in May 2012 after years of neglect.[8] Just after the railroad right-of-way, NY 133 turns southwestward onto Station Place while NY 120 proceeds northwest as Millwood Road for one more sparsely developed block before terminating at a junction with NY 100 (Saw Mill River Road) at the northern edge of the hamlet.[3]

History edit

The segment of modern NY 120 between Westchester Avenue and the north end of the overlap with NY 22 was originally designated as part of Route 1, an unsigned legislative route, by the New York State Legislature in 1908. Route 1 approached Purchase Street from the west on Westchester Avenue and continued north from Armonk on what is now NY 22.[9][10] NY 120, meanwhile, was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to the portion of its modern alignment north of the junction of Purchase Street and Westchester Avenue (then NY 119) in Harrison.[2] It was extended south to US 1 in Rye c. 1938 by way of Purchase Street and Highland Road.[11][12]

NY 120 was altered again by the following year to follow NY 119 east along Westchester Avenue to US 1 in Port Chester. Most of NY 120's former routing south of Westchester Avenue became part of NY 119A, a new route assigned to all of Purchase Street between NY 119 and NY 120 in Harrison and US 1 in Rye.[13] NY 120 was realigned once more in October 1960 to follow Purchase Street south to Rye, supplanting NY 119A. At the same time, NY 119 was truncated on its east end to Purchase Street while the portion of Westchester Avenue that had carried NY 119 and NY 120 between Purchase Street and Port Chester became an extension of NY 120A.[14]

The two-lane bridge carrying NY 120 over the Metro-North Railroad in Chappaqua was rebuilt as a four-lane bridge in 2012 for $19 million.[15] Once completed, the bridge was named the SSG Kyu Hyuk Chay Memorial Bridge in memory of Army Staff Sergeant Kyu Chay, whose family owns a dry cleaning business adjacent to the bridge. A plaque was also erected in his honor at the war memorial by the Chappaqua train station.[4][16] Chay, a Special Forces linguist and Korean immigrant, was three credits shy of his law degree at Brooklyn Law School when he was killed in Afghanistan.[17]

Suffixed routes edit

 

New York State Route 120B

LocationRye cityNorth Castle
Existedc. 1932[18]c. 1939[13]

NY 120 once had two suffixed routes; only one still exists.

  • NY 120A (8.55 miles or 13.76 kilometres) is an alternate route of NY 120 between Harrison and North Castle. The northern half of the route straddles the New YorkConnecticut state line, and two portions of the route are physically located in Connecticut.[1] It was assigned c. 1931.[2][19]
  • NY 120B was an alternate route of NY 120 between Rye and North Castle. It was assigned by 1932[18] and partially replaced by NY 120A c. 1939.[13][20]

Major intersections edit

The entire route is in Westchester County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
City of Rye0.000.00  US 1 (Boston Post Road)Southern terminus
Harrison2.153.46 
 
NY 120A north (Westchester Avenue)
Southern terminus of NY 120A
2.494.01  I-287 / Westchester Avenue – Rye, White PlainsExit 10 on I-287
3.505.63  Hutchinson River ParkwayExit 16B on Hutchinson Parkway; hamlet of Purchase
Southern end of limited-access section
Town of North Castle7.5912.21  
 
  I-684 / Airport Road to I-287 – Westchester County Airport
Exit 2 on I-684
Northern end of limited-access section
7.9712.83 
 
NY 120A south
Northern terminus of NY 120A
9.4415.19 
 
NY 22 south – White Plains
Southern end of NY 22 concurrency
9.7615.71 
 
NY 22 north – Armonk
Northern end of NY 22 concurrency
Town of New Castle13.9922.51 
 
NY 117 south – Pleasantville
Southern end of NY 117 concurrency; hamlet of Chappaqua
14.0522.61 
 
NY 117 north – Mt. Kisco
Northern end of NY 117 concurrency; hamlet of Chappaqua
14.7323.71  Saw Mill River ParkwayAccess via local roads
17.3027.84 
 
NY 133 east – Mt. Kisco
Southern end of NY 133 concurrency
17.8328.69 
 
NY 133 west
Northern end of NY 133 concurrency; hamlet of Millwood
18.0329.02  NY 100 – SomersNorthern terminus; hamlet of Millwood
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. pp. 245–246. Retrieved November 19, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company of New York. 1930.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Microsoft; Nokia (May 14, 2012). "overview map of NY 120" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved May 14, 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Governor Cuomo Signs Legislation to Designate Two Portions of State Route 120 in Westchester After Two Service Members Who Were Killed Overseas" (Press release). Office of the Governor of New York. July 3, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  5. ^ Oliva, Zach (June 14, 2012). "Bill Would Name Local Road After Fallen Soldier". Harrison Patch. Patch Media. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  6. ^ "Roadway Designated in Memory of Former Purchase College Student Anthony N. Kalladeen". SUNY Purchase. July 5, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  7. ^ Lynn Beebe Weaver (October 1973). "National Register of Historic Places Registration:Old Chappaqua Historic District". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  8. ^ Marschhauser, Brian (July 14, 2012). "Millwood Train Station Replica Still In The Works". The Daily Voice. Chappaqua, NY. Retrieved September 21, 2012.
  9. ^ State of New York Department of Highways (1909). The Highway Law. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company. p. 53. Retrieved June 10, 2010.
  10. ^ New York State Department of Highways (1920). Report of the State Commissioner of Highways. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 495–496. Retrieved June 10, 2010.
  11. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company. 1937.
  12. ^ Thibodeau, William A. (1938). The ALA Green Book (1938–39 ed.). Automobile Legal Association.
  13. ^ a b c New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company. 1939.
  14. ^ "State Shifts Numbers Of Area Routes". The Herald Statesman. October 11, 1960. p. 11. Retrieved February 1, 2017.
  15. ^ Ganga, Lisa (December 22, 2011). "Chappaqua's Route 120 bridge dedicated by DOT, officials". The Journal News. White Plains, NY. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  16. ^ Auctherlonie, Tom (July 3, 2012). "Cuomo Signs Bill Renaming Chappaqua Bridge After Slain Soldier". Chappaqua Patch. Patch Media. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  17. ^ Marschhauser, Brian (July 3, 2012). "Chappaqua Bridge Renamed To Honor Fallen Veteran". Chappaqua Daily Voice. The Daily Voice. Retrieved March 15, 2013.
  18. ^ a b Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Texas Oil Company. 1932.
  19. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Kendall Refining Company. 1931.
  20. ^ New York Road Map for 1938 (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1938.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • New York State Route 120 at New York Routes

york, state, route, state, highway, southern, westchester, county, york, united, states, begins, city, intersection, with, route, runs, about, miles, north, hamlet, millwood, where, ends, junction, with, route, intersects, with, interstate, mill, river, parkwa. New York State Route 120 NY 120 is a state highway in southern Westchester County New York in the United States It begins in the city of Rye at an intersection with U S Route 1 US 1 and runs for about 18 miles 29 km north to the hamlet of Millwood where it ends at a junction with NY 100 The route intersects with Interstate 684 I 684 and the Saw Mill River Parkway and serves the Westchester County Airport in North Castle Portions of the route have been signed ceremonially in remembrance of American serviceman killed in the 2000s and 2010s during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan New York State Route 120Map of the lower Hudson Valley with NY 120 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NYSDOT and the city of RyeLength18 03 mi 1 29 02 km Existed1930 2 presentMajor junctionsSouth endUS 1 in RyeMajor intersectionsI 287 NY 120A in Purchase Hutchinson River Parkway in Purchase I 684 in West Harrison NY 22 in Armonk Saw Mill River Parkway in ChappaquaNorth endNY 100 in MillwoodLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesWestchesterHighway systemNew York Highways Interstate US State Reference Parkways NY 119 NY 120A NY 120 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York but only to the portion of its routing north of Westchester Avenue It was extended south to Rye c 1938 then rerouted to follow Westchester Avenue east to Port Chester by the following year Most of NY 120 s former routing to Rye became part of New York State Route 119A at that time NY 120 was rerouted to serve Rye again in October 1960 replacing NY 119A Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Rye to Harrison 1 2 North Castle to Millwood 2 History 3 Suffixed routes 4 Major intersections 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editRye to Harrison edit NY 120 begins at an intersection with US 1 Boston Post Road in the city of Rye The route proceeds northward along Purchase Street as a two lane street through the Locust Avenue Business District intersecting a handful of local streets and serving Rye s station on the Metro North Railroad s New Haven Line Past the station the highway passes under the New Haven Line Amtrak s Northeast Corridor line and I 95 in quick succession ahead of the Purchase Street Business District The commercial surroundings give way to residential neighborhoods after three blocks as NY 120 winds northward through the northern part of Rye to the adjacent village town of Harrison 3 In Harrison NY 120 passes several mansions on both sides of the highway as it gradually turns northwestward and approaches I 287 the Cross Westchester Expressway The route parallels the western edge of the freeway for several blocks to Westchester Avenue where NY 120 meets the southern end of NY 120A an alternate route through the easternmost part of Westchester County While NY 120A heads east toward Port Chester NY 120 takes on the Westchester Avenue name as the two directions of the route split to follow collector distributor roads running northwestward along both sides of I 287 The route remains on the frontage roads for about a half mile 0 8 km to another section of Purchase Street where NY 120 turns to follow a slightly more northward track through another residential section of Harrison 3 nbsp NY 120 northbound approaching the junction with NY 22 on the shores of the Kensico Reservoir in North Castle Less than 1 mile 1 6 km from I 287 NY 120 connects to the Hutchinson River Parkway by way of exit 27 a diamond interchange just northeast of the parkway s interchanges with I 287 and a reference route spur leading to I 684 Continuing northward from the parkway the highway enters the hamlet of Purchase where NY 120 runs along the eastern edge of Manhattanville College s campus and passes a short distance west of the State University of New York at Purchase 3 Part of Purchase Street near the entrance to SUNY Purchase at Anderson Hill Road is named the Specialist Anthony N Kalladeen Memorial Highway in memory of United States Army Specialist Anthony Kalladeen a SUNY Purchase student who was killed in Iraq in 2004 4 5 A dormitory at the school is also named for him 6 Another stretch of homes north of Purchase leads to Westchester County Airport situated between NY 120 and the New York Connecticut state line about 1 mile 1 6 km to the east Here NY 120 begins to run alongside I 684 as a four lane undivided expressway and both roads pass by Rye Lake an offshoot of the Kensico Reservoir NY 120 meets the airport s main entrance in the town of North Castle where the road connects to I 684 via Airport Road unsigned County Route 135 or CR 135 where NY 120 becomes a two lane surface road 3 North Castle to Millwood edit Continuing northward I 684 and NY 120 head due north toward the state line where NY 120A rejoins its parent route at a junction with King Street just north of the airport From here I 684 continues north into Connecticut while NY 120 takes on the King Street name and turns northwest to straddle the state line for roughly 1 mile 1 6 km The route passes over I 684 and the northern tip of Rye Lake and serves an industrial complex in the Connecticut town of Greenwich before the state line turns 90 degrees to the northeast NY 120 remains on a northwesterly alignment however and it crosses the Delaware Aqueduct prior to meeting NY 22 Mount Kisco Road on the edge of another Kensico Reservoir inlet The two routes briefly overlap to cross the inlet on a causeway before splitting on the water body s north shore From here NY 120 heads through substantially less developed mostly wooded areas as it traverses the northeastern edge of the reservoir 3 North of the reservoir NY 120 crosses the northernmost part of the Bronx River and traverses the northeastern corner of the town of Mount Pleasant where the woods give way to a handful of residential neighborhoods The transition in surroundings continues into the adjacent town of New Castle home to housing tracts that become less isolated as the road veers westward toward the hamlet of Chappaqua NY 120 proceeds west through residential and commercial areas to Chappaqua s central business district where it meets the community s main north south route NY 117 Bedford Road NY 120 heads north through the center of Chappaqua overlapping with NY 117 to reach another section of King Street one block to the north Past NY 117 NY 120 continues generally westward through Chappaqua changing names to Quaker Road a short distance east of Chappaqua s station on the Metro North Railroad s Harlem Line 3 nbsp NY 120 southbound along concurrency with NY 133 in Millwood After crossing the Harlem Line the route dips under the Saw Mill River Parkway and intersects two parallel local streets leading to the parkway s exit 32 NY 120 turns northward here crossing over the Saw Mill River and leaving Chappaqua for less densely populated areas of the town of New Castle At 0 6 miles 0 97 km north of Chappaqua early 19th century farmhouses that clustered around the Quaker meeting house that was then the center of Chappaqua line the road Today these are listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Old Chappaqua Historic District 7 Roughly 1 5 miles 2 4 km past the historic district NY 120 makes a gradual turn to the west to reach a junction with NY 133 Millwood Road NY 120 turns onto NY 133 following Millwood Road westward into the hamlet of Millwood and its commercial center 3 Here the two routes cross the right of way of the former Putnam Division of the New York Central Railroad and pass by the site of Millwood s station which was demolished in May 2012 after years of neglect 8 Just after the railroad right of way NY 133 turns southwestward onto Station Place while NY 120 proceeds northwest as Millwood Road for one more sparsely developed block before terminating at a junction with NY 100 Saw Mill River Road at the northern edge of the hamlet 3 History editThe segment of modern NY 120 between Westchester Avenue and the north end of the overlap with NY 22 was originally designated as part of Route 1 an unsigned legislative route by the New York State Legislature in 1908 Route 1 approached Purchase Street from the west on Westchester Avenue and continued north from Armonk on what is now NY 22 9 10 NY 120 meanwhile was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to the portion of its modern alignment north of the junction of Purchase Street and Westchester Avenue then NY 119 in Harrison 2 It was extended south to US 1 in Rye c 1938 by way of Purchase Street and Highland Road 11 12 NY 120 was altered again by the following year to follow NY 119 east along Westchester Avenue to US 1 in Port Chester Most of NY 120 s former routing south of Westchester Avenue became part of NY 119A a new route assigned to all of Purchase Street between NY 119 and NY 120 in Harrison and US 1 in Rye 13 NY 120 was realigned once more in October 1960 to follow Purchase Street south to Rye supplanting NY 119A At the same time NY 119 was truncated on its east end to Purchase Street while the portion of Westchester Avenue that had carried NY 119 and NY 120 between Purchase Street and Port Chester became an extension of NY 120A 14 The two lane bridge carrying NY 120 over the Metro North Railroad in Chappaqua was rebuilt as a four lane bridge in 2012 for 19 million 15 Once completed the bridge was named the SSG Kyu Hyuk Chay Memorial Bridge in memory of Army Staff Sergeant Kyu Chay whose family owns a dry cleaning business adjacent to the bridge A plaque was also erected in his honor at the war memorial by the Chappaqua train station 4 16 Chay a Special Forces linguist and Korean immigrant was three credits shy of his law degree at Brooklyn Law School when he was killed in Afghanistan 17 Suffixed routes edit nbsp New York State Route 120BLocationRye city North CastleExistedc 1932 18 c 1939 13 NY 120 once had two suffixed routes only one still exists NY 120A 8 55 miles or 13 76 kilometres is an alternate route of NY 120 between Harrison and North Castle The northern half of the route straddles the New York Connecticut state line and two portions of the route are physically located in Connecticut 1 It was assigned c 1931 2 19 NY 120B was an alternate route of NY 120 between Rye and North Castle It was assigned by 1932 18 and partially replaced by NY 120A c 1939 13 20 Major intersections editThe entire route is in Westchester County Locationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotes City of Rye0 000 00 nbsp US 1 Boston Post Road Southern terminus Harrison2 153 46 nbsp nbsp NY 120A north Westchester Avenue Southern terminus of NY 120A 2 494 01 nbsp I 287 Westchester Avenue Rye White PlainsExit 10 on I 287 3 505 63 nbsp Hutchinson River ParkwayExit 16B on Hutchinson Parkway hamlet of Purchase Southern end of limited access section Town of North Castle7 5912 21 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 684 Airport Road to I 287 Westchester County AirportExit 2 on I 684 Northern end of limited access section 7 9712 83 nbsp nbsp NY 120A southNorthern terminus of NY 120A 9 4415 19 nbsp nbsp NY 22 south White PlainsSouthern end of NY 22 concurrency 9 7615 71 nbsp nbsp NY 22 north ArmonkNorthern end of NY 22 concurrency Town of New Castle13 9922 51 nbsp nbsp NY 117 south PleasantvilleSouthern end of NY 117 concurrency hamlet of Chappaqua 14 0522 61 nbsp nbsp NY 117 north Mt KiscoNorthern end of NY 117 concurrency hamlet of Chappaqua 14 7323 71 nbsp Saw Mill River ParkwayAccess via local roads 17 3027 84 nbsp nbsp NY 133 east Mt KiscoSouthern end of NY 133 concurrency 17 8328 69 nbsp nbsp NY 133 westNorthern end of NY 133 concurrency hamlet of Millwood 18 0329 02 nbsp NY 100 SomersNorthern terminus hamlet of Millwood 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete accessSee also edit nbsp U S roads portalReferences edit a b c 2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 pp 245 246 Retrieved November 19 2009 a b c Road Map of New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1930 a b c d e f g h Microsoft Nokia May 14 2012 overview map of NY 120 Map Bing Maps Microsoft Retrieved May 14 2012 a b Governor Cuomo Signs Legislation to Designate Two Portions of State Route 120 in Westchester After Two Service Members Who Were Killed Overseas Press release Office of the Governor of New York July 3 2012 Retrieved March 15 2013 Oliva Zach June 14 2012 Bill Would Name Local Road After Fallen Soldier Harrison Patch Patch Media Retrieved March 15 2013 Roadway Designated in Memory of Former Purchase College Student Anthony N Kalladeen SUNY Purchase July 5 2012 Retrieved March 15 2013 Lynn Beebe Weaver October 1973 National Register of Historic Places Registration Old Chappaqua Historic District New York State Office of Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation Retrieved March 20 2013 Marschhauser Brian July 14 2012 Millwood Train Station Replica Still In The Works The Daily Voice Chappaqua NY Retrieved September 21 2012 State of New York Department of Highways 1909 The Highway Law Albany NY J B Lyon Company p 53 Retrieved June 10 2010 New York State Department of Highways 1920 Report of the State Commissioner of Highways Albany NY J B Lyon Company pp 495 496 Retrieved June 10 2010 New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company 1937 Thibodeau William A 1938 The ALA Green Book 1938 39 ed Automobile Legal Association a b c New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company 1939 State Shifts Numbers Of Area Routes The Herald Statesman October 11 1960 p 11 Retrieved February 1 2017 Ganga Lisa December 22 2011 Chappaqua s Route 120 bridge dedicated by DOT officials The Journal News White Plains NY Retrieved March 15 2013 Auctherlonie Tom July 3 2012 Cuomo Signs Bill Renaming Chappaqua Bridge After Slain Soldier Chappaqua Patch Patch Media Retrieved March 15 2013 Marschhauser Brian July 3 2012 Chappaqua Bridge Renamed To Honor Fallen Veteran Chappaqua Daily Voice The Daily Voice Retrieved March 15 2013 a b Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1932 New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Kendall Refining Company 1931 New York Road Map for 1938 Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1938 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York State Route 120 KML file edit help Template Attached KML New York State Route 120KML is from Wikidata New York State Route 120 at New York Routes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York State Route 120 amp oldid 1223587069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.