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New York State Route 126

New York State Route 126 (NY 126) is a 28.56-mile-long (45.96 km) state highway in the North Country of New York in the United States. It proceeds in a roughly northwest to southeast direction between NY 12 at the eastern city line of Watertown in central Jefferson County and NY 812 in the village of Croghan in northern Lewis County. In between, NY 126 serves the adjacent villages of West Carthage and Carthage, where the route has overlaps with NY 3 (in Carthage) and NY 26 (in West Carthage). Most of the route passes through rural areas, and the portion southeast of Carthage parallels either the Black River or a tributary of it.

New York State Route 126

NY 126 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT
Length28.56 mi[1] (45.96 km)
ExistedJuly 1, 1977[2]–present
Major junctions
West end NY 12 on Watertown city/town line
Major intersections NY 26 in West Carthage
East end NY 812 in Croghan
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesJefferson, Lewis
Highway system

The portion of NY 126 between Carthage and Croghan was originally part of New York State Route 26A (NY 26A), an alternate route of NY 26 assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York. It began at NY 26 in Lowville and passed through Croghan before ending at NY 3 and NY 26 in Carthage. At the time, the section of what is now NY 126 from Broad Street in West Carthage to James Street in Carthage was part of NY 26.

NY 26A ceased to exist on July 1, 1974 when it was replaced by two new routes: NY 126 northwest of Croghan and NY 812 south of the village. In 1979, the state of New York acquired two county roads leading from West Carthage—one connecting to Evans Mills and another that went to Watertown—as part of a highway maintenance swap between the state and Jefferson County. NY 26 was realigned to follow the new state highway leading to Evans Mills, while NY 126 was extended westward to its current terminus in Watertown by way of NY 26's original routing through Carthage and West Carthage and the newly acquired highway linking West Carthage and Watertown.

Route description edit

Jefferson County edit

NY 126 begins at an intersection with NY 12 located on the eastern city line of Watertown. The route heads east, passing through a predominantly residential area of the town of Watertown. Roughly 1 mile (1.6 km) east of NY 12, the homes give way to open fields as the route enters the town of Rutland. Within Rutland, NY 126 serves only the small, rural hamlets of Rutland Center and Harpers Ferry before passing into the town of Champion. 3 miles (5 km) into Champion, NY 126 enters the hamlet of the same name, situated at the junction of NY 126 and County Route 47. NY 126 passes east–west through the center of the small, mostly residential community before turning to the northeast as it leaves the hamlet.[3]

 
Western terminus of NY 126 at NY 12 in Watertown

The route continues onward through open fields to the village of West Carthage, where it becomes known as Champion Street and meets NY 26 west of the village center at Martin and North Broad Streets. NY 126 turns south onto North Broad Street, overlapping NY 26 south for four blocks through the mostly commercial western fringe of the village to Bridge Street. The two routes split here, with NY 26 continuing south out of the village on South Broad Street and NY 126 proceeding northeast through residential portions of the village on Bridge Street. At the northeast edge of West Carthage, NY 126 crosses the Black River and enters the adjacent village of Carthage on the opposite bank, where NY 126 changes names to State Street.[3]

The first three blocks of NY 126 within Carthage are located in a commercial neighborhood; however, the businesses give way to homes at School Street, which carries NY 3 into the village from the northwest. NY 3 turns onto State Street here, overlapping NY 126 for one block to James Street. Here, NY 3 continues northeast on State Street while NY 126 turns southeast onto James Street. Although NY 126 exits the village and enters the town of Wilna near Cemetery Street, homes continue to line the highway up to the point where NY 126 begins to follow the eastern bank of the Black River. The route exits Jefferson County and enters Lewis County roughly 0.25 miles (0.40 km) later.[3]

Lewis County edit

 
NY 126 east in Beaver Falls

Now in the town of Croghan, NY 126 becomes a rural connector highway once again as it runs in close proximity to the Black River. The two separate about 2 miles (3.2 km) south of the county line as NY 126 leaves the riverbank and follows a more northeasterly routing than the river through the town. NY 126 parallels the waterway to the hamlet of Naumburg, located near the point where the Beaver River merges with the Black River. NY 126 intersects NY 410 in the center of the hamlet.[3]

East of Naumburg, NY 126 follows the north bank of the Beaver River as it proceeds through rural Croghan. About 3 miles (5 km) from Naumburg, NY 126 crosses the river and enters the hamlet of Beaver Falls, a large community situated on the river. NY 126 bypasses most of the hamlet, however, as it runs through the lightly populated southern part of Beaver Falls instead of the more densely populated half on the north riverbank. Past Beaver Falls, NY 126 leaves the Beaver River and heads through fields and small forested areas to the village of Croghan, where the highway is named Shady Avenue. The route continues as a residential street for two blocks to a junction with NY 812 just south of the village center, where NY 126 ends.[3]

History edit

 
Southern terminus of NY 126's overlap with NY 26 in West Carthage. NY 26 originally turned right at this junction and followed modern NY 126 into Carthage.

The origins of NY 126 date back to the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, when an alternate routing of NY 26 between Lowville and Carthage was designated as NY 26A. While NY 26 went directly between the two villages, NY 26A went northeast from Lowville to Croghan before turning northwest and paralleling NY 26 to Carthage,[4] where it ended at State Street (NY 3). At the time, NY 26A also ended at NY 26, which initially passed through Carthage and Antwerp on its way from West Carthage to Theresa. In West Carthage and Carthage, NY 26 followed Bridge and State Streets, resulting in an overlap with NY 3 through eastern Carthage.[5]

The portion of NY 26 between Carthage and Antwerp was rerouted in 1960 to follow a new alignment via Calcium, part of which used a new state highway northeast of Watertown.[6][7][8] NY 26A may have been extended southwestward along State Street for one block to meet NY 26 as a result.[9] NY 26 was truncated southward in the mid-1970s to the junction of State and School Streets,[10][11] which had been the southern terminus of its overlap with NY 3 since 1960.[7] On July 1, 1974, NY 26A was supplanted by two new routes: NY 126, which was assigned to the Carthage–Croghan segment of NY 26A, and NY 812, which extended from Lowville to Ogdensburg via Croghan.[12]

On August 1, 1979, the state of New York assumed ownership and maintenance of two county-maintained highways leading from West Carthage as part of a highway maintenance swap between the state and Jefferson County. One connected West Carthage to Evans Mills and became part of a re-extended NY 26; the other led from West Carthage to NY 12 in Watertown.[13][14] The Watertown–West Carthage highway became part of an extended NY 126, which reached the new state highway by way of an overlap with NY 26 along North Broad Street in West Carthage and the former routing of NY 26 along Bridge and State Streets in West Carthage and Carthage.[14]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
JeffersonWatertownWatertown
city/town line
0.000.00  NY 12 (State Street / Gifford Street) – Lowville, UticaWestern terminus
West Carthage12.8620.70 
 
NY 26 north (Martin Street Road) – Great Bend
Northern terminus of NY 26 / NY 126 overlap
13.6421.95 
 
NY 26 south (South Broad Street) – Lowville
Southern terminus of NY 26 / NY 126 overlap
Carthage14.7723.77 
 
NY 3 west (North School Street)
Southern terminus of NY 3 / NY 126 overlap
14.8523.90 
 
  NY 3 east (State Street)
Northern terminus of NY 3 / NY 126 overlap
LewisTown of Croghan23.0237.05 
 
NY 410 west – Naumburg, Castorland
Hamlet of Naumburg; eastern terminus of NY 410
Village of Croghan28.5645.96  NY 812 (Main Street) – Harrisville, LowvilleEastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. p. 247. Retrieved December 1, 2009.
  2. ^ Herr, Charles (August 24, 1977). Description of Touring Routes in New York State for the Interstate (I), Federal (US) and State (NY) Route Number Systems. New York State Department of Transportation.
  3. ^ a b c d e Google (November 22, 2015). "Overview map of NY 126" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved November 22, 2015.
  4. ^ Dickinson, Leon A. (January 12, 1930). "New Signs for State Highways". The New York Times. p. 136.
  5. ^ Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company of New York. 1930.
  6. ^ New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Gulf Oil Company. 1960.
  7. ^ a b New York and Metropolitan New York (Map) (1961–62 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Sunoco. 1961.
  8. ^ New York State Department of Transportation (November 2008). "Fort Drum Connector Final Environmental Impact Statement – Chapter II" (PDF). p. 7. Retrieved December 1, 2009. In 1960, NYS Route 342, from NYS Route 12 to NYS Route 283, was taken over by Official Order No. 406.
  9. ^ State of New York Department of Transportation (January 1, 1970). Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State (PDF). p. 12. Retrieved December 1, 2009. The northern terminus is given as Route 26 in Carthage.
  10. ^ New York (Map) (1977–78 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Exxon. 1977.
  11. ^ New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Gulf Oil Company. 1974.
  12. ^ New York State Department of Transportation (August 24, 1977). Official Description of Highway Touring Routes in New York State.
  13. ^ New York State Legislature. "New York State Highway Law § 341". Retrieved December 2, 2009.
  14. ^ a b I Love New York Tourism Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. State of New York. 1981.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • New York State Route 126 at New York Routes

york, state, route, this, article, about, current, alignment, previous, alignments, disambiguation, mile, long, state, highway, north, country, york, united, states, proceeds, roughly, northwest, southeast, direction, between, eastern, city, line, watertown, c. This article is about the current alignment of NY 126 For previous alignments of NY 126 see New York State Route 126 disambiguation New York State Route 126 NY 126 is a 28 56 mile long 45 96 km state highway in the North Country of New York in the United States It proceeds in a roughly northwest to southeast direction between NY 12 at the eastern city line of Watertown in central Jefferson County and NY 812 in the village of Croghan in northern Lewis County In between NY 126 serves the adjacent villages of West Carthage and Carthage where the route has overlaps with NY 3 in Carthage and NY 26 in West Carthage Most of the route passes through rural areas and the portion southeast of Carthage parallels either the Black River or a tributary of it New York State Route 126NY 126 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NYSDOTLength28 56 mi 1 45 96 km ExistedJuly 1 1977 2 presentMajor junctionsWest endNY 12 on Watertown city town lineMajor intersectionsNY 26 in West CarthageEast endNY 812 in CroghanLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesJefferson LewisHighway systemNew York HighwaysInterstate US State Reference Parkways NY 125 NY 127 NY 26 NY 26BThe portion of NY 126 between Carthage and Croghan was originally part of New York State Route 26A NY 26A an alternate route of NY 26 assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York It began at NY 26 in Lowville and passed through Croghan before ending at NY 3 and NY 26 in Carthage At the time the section of what is now NY 126 from Broad Street in West Carthage to James Street in Carthage was part of NY 26 NY 26A ceased to exist on July 1 1974 when it was replaced by two new routes NY 126 northwest of Croghan and NY 812 south of the village In 1979 the state of New York acquired two county roads leading from West Carthage one connecting to Evans Mills and another that went to Watertown as part of a highway maintenance swap between the state and Jefferson County NY 26 was realigned to follow the new state highway leading to Evans Mills while NY 126 was extended westward to its current terminus in Watertown by way of NY 26 s original routing through Carthage and West Carthage and the newly acquired highway linking West Carthage and Watertown Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Jefferson County 1 2 Lewis County 2 History 3 Major intersections 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute description editJefferson County edit NY 126 begins at an intersection with NY 12 located on the eastern city line of Watertown The route heads east passing through a predominantly residential area of the town of Watertown Roughly 1 mile 1 6 km east of NY 12 the homes give way to open fields as the route enters the town of Rutland Within Rutland NY 126 serves only the small rural hamlets of Rutland Center and Harpers Ferry before passing into the town of Champion 3 miles 5 km into Champion NY 126 enters the hamlet of the same name situated at the junction of NY 126 and County Route 47 NY 126 passes east west through the center of the small mostly residential community before turning to the northeast as it leaves the hamlet 3 nbsp Western terminus of NY 126 at NY 12 in WatertownThe route continues onward through open fields to the village of West Carthage where it becomes known as Champion Street and meets NY 26 west of the village center at Martin and North Broad Streets NY 126 turns south onto North Broad Street overlapping NY 26 south for four blocks through the mostly commercial western fringe of the village to Bridge Street The two routes split here with NY 26 continuing south out of the village on South Broad Street and NY 126 proceeding northeast through residential portions of the village on Bridge Street At the northeast edge of West Carthage NY 126 crosses the Black River and enters the adjacent village of Carthage on the opposite bank where NY 126 changes names to State Street 3 The first three blocks of NY 126 within Carthage are located in a commercial neighborhood however the businesses give way to homes at School Street which carries NY 3 into the village from the northwest NY 3 turns onto State Street here overlapping NY 126 for one block to James Street Here NY 3 continues northeast on State Street while NY 126 turns southeast onto James Street Although NY 126 exits the village and enters the town of Wilna near Cemetery Street homes continue to line the highway up to the point where NY 126 begins to follow the eastern bank of the Black River The route exits Jefferson County and enters Lewis County roughly 0 25 miles 0 40 km later 3 Lewis County edit nbsp NY 126 east in Beaver FallsNow in the town of Croghan NY 126 becomes a rural connector highway once again as it runs in close proximity to the Black River The two separate about 2 miles 3 2 km south of the county line as NY 126 leaves the riverbank and follows a more northeasterly routing than the river through the town NY 126 parallels the waterway to the hamlet of Naumburg located near the point where the Beaver River merges with the Black River NY 126 intersects NY 410 in the center of the hamlet 3 East of Naumburg NY 126 follows the north bank of the Beaver River as it proceeds through rural Croghan About 3 miles 5 km from Naumburg NY 126 crosses the river and enters the hamlet of Beaver Falls a large community situated on the river NY 126 bypasses most of the hamlet however as it runs through the lightly populated southern part of Beaver Falls instead of the more densely populated half on the north riverbank Past Beaver Falls NY 126 leaves the Beaver River and heads through fields and small forested areas to the village of Croghan where the highway is named Shady Avenue The route continues as a residential street for two blocks to a junction with NY 812 just south of the village center where NY 126 ends 3 History edit nbsp Southern terminus of NY 126 s overlap with NY 26 in West Carthage NY 26 originally turned right at this junction and followed modern NY 126 into Carthage The origins of NY 126 date back to the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York when an alternate routing of NY 26 between Lowville and Carthage was designated as NY 26A While NY 26 went directly between the two villages NY 26A went northeast from Lowville to Croghan before turning northwest and paralleling NY 26 to Carthage 4 where it ended at State Street NY 3 At the time NY 26A also ended at NY 26 which initially passed through Carthage and Antwerp on its way from West Carthage to Theresa In West Carthage and Carthage NY 26 followed Bridge and State Streets resulting in an overlap with NY 3 through eastern Carthage 5 The portion of NY 26 between Carthage and Antwerp was rerouted in 1960 to follow a new alignment via Calcium part of which used a new state highway northeast of Watertown 6 7 8 NY 26A may have been extended southwestward along State Street for one block to meet NY 26 as a result 9 NY 26 was truncated southward in the mid 1970s to the junction of State and School Streets 10 11 which had been the southern terminus of its overlap with NY 3 since 1960 7 On July 1 1974 NY 26A was supplanted by two new routes NY 126 which was assigned to the Carthage Croghan segment of NY 26A and NY 812 which extended from Lowville to Ogdensburg via Croghan 12 On August 1 1979 the state of New York assumed ownership and maintenance of two county maintained highways leading from West Carthage as part of a highway maintenance swap between the state and Jefferson County One connected West Carthage to Evans Mills and became part of a re extended NY 26 the other led from West Carthage to NY 12 in Watertown 13 14 The Watertown West Carthage highway became part of an extended NY 126 which reached the new state highway by way of an overlap with NY 26 along North Broad Street in West Carthage and the former routing of NY 26 along Bridge and State Streets in West Carthage and Carthage 14 Major intersections editCountyLocationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotesJeffersonWatertown Watertowncity town line0 000 00 nbsp NY 12 State Street Gifford Street Lowville UticaWestern terminusWest Carthage12 8620 70 nbsp nbsp NY 26 north Martin Street Road Great BendNorthern terminus of NY 26 NY 126 overlap13 6421 95 nbsp nbsp NY 26 south South Broad Street LowvilleSouthern terminus of NY 26 NY 126 overlapCarthage14 7723 77 nbsp nbsp NY 3 west North School Street Southern terminus of NY 3 NY 126 overlap14 8523 90 nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 3 east State Street Northern terminus of NY 3 NY 126 overlapLewisTown of Croghan23 0237 05 nbsp nbsp NY 410 west Naumburg CastorlandHamlet of Naumburg eastern terminus of NY 410Village of Croghan28 5645 96 nbsp NY 812 Main Street Harrisville LowvilleEastern terminus1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusSee also edit nbsp U S roads portalReferences edit a b 2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 p 247 Retrieved December 1 2009 Herr Charles August 24 1977 Description of Touring Routes in New York State for the Interstate I Federal US and State NY Route Number Systems New York State Department of Transportation a b c d e Google November 22 2015 Overview map of NY 126 Map Google Maps Google Retrieved November 22 2015 Dickinson Leon A January 12 1930 New Signs for State Highways The New York Times p 136 Road Map of New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1930 New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1960 a b New York and Metropolitan New York Map 1961 62 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Sunoco 1961 New York State Department of Transportation November 2008 Fort Drum Connector Final Environmental Impact Statement Chapter II PDF p 7 Retrieved December 1 2009 In 1960 NYS Route 342 from NYS Route 12 to NYS Route 283 was taken over by Official Order No 406 State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF p 12 Retrieved December 1 2009 The northern terminus is given as Route 26 in Carthage New York Map 1977 78 ed Cartography by General Drafting Exxon 1977 New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1974 New York State Department of Transportation August 24 1977 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes in New York State New York State Legislature New York State Highway Law 341 Retrieved December 2 2009 a b I Love New York Tourism Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company State of New York 1981 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York State Route 126 KML file edit help Template Attached KML New York State Route 126KML is from Wikidata New York State Route 126 at New York Routes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York State Route 126 amp oldid 1139445744, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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