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New York State Route 18

New York State Route 18 (NY 18) is an east–west state highway in western New York in the United States. It runs parallel to the south shore of Lake Ontario for most of its length between Niagara County and Monroe County. NY 18, which also passes through Orleans County, acts as a northerly alternate to NY 104, another east–west route that parallels NY 18 to the south on Ridge Road. The western terminus of NY 18 is at a complex grade-separated interchange with NY 104 outside the village of Lewiston. Its eastern terminus is at a junction with NY 104 in an area of Rochester known as Eastman Business Park.

New York State Route 18

Map of western New York with NY 18 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT, Monroe County and the city of Rochester
Length87.40 mi[1] (140.66 km)
Existed1924[2]–present
Tourist
routes
Great Lakes Seaway Trail
Major junctions
West end NY 104 in Lewiston
Major intersections
East end NY 104 in Rochester
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
CountiesNiagara, Orleans, Monroe
Highway system

NY 18 was assigned in 1924 and originally extended from the Pennsylvania state line near Salamanca to downtown Buffalo via Dayton and Hamburg. It was extended northeast to Rochester via Niagara Falls as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York and east to NY 250 in the town of Webster by the following year. NY 18 was truncated on its west end to the town of Lewiston in the early 1960s and on its east end to Rochester in the early 1970s.

Although NY 18 is signed as east–west, it runs primarily north–south through the western portion of Niagara County. After leaving Niagara County, NY 18 shifts farther south, gradually moving away from the shore of Lake Ontario. In central Orleans County, NY 18 meets the Lake Ontario State Parkway at the Lakeside Beach State Park. The parkway then becomes the lakeside road, and NY 18 veers south to follow a more inland routing.

Route description edit

Niagara County edit

 
NY 18 northwest of Model City

NY 18 begins at a junction with NY 104 south of a complex grade-separated interchange that includes NY 18F, NY 104, and the Niagara Scenic Parkway on the eastern edge of the village of Lewiston. From NY 104 east, a right-turn ramp allows access to Creek Road Extension, the first street that modern-day NY 18 occupies. NY 104 continues north from the ramp, passing over NY 18 westbound (which terminates at the merge ramp with NY 104 west) on its way to the village while NY 18 proceeds to the northeast on Creek Road Extension, bypassing Lewiston to the southeast. After 0.5 miles (0.8 km), the highway curves to the north and meets NY 104 at an unconventional grade-separated interchange that has a pair of two-way ramps connecting the two state routes. NY 18 continues on, passing under NY 104 and paralleling the Niagara Scenic Parkway as it proceeds north.[3]

At a wye in the Porter hamlet of Blairville, NY 18 breaks from its north–south alignment and turns to the northeast before curving northward once more, returning to a perfect north–south alignment at an intersection with NY 93 in the hamlet of Towers Corners. Southwest of the Four Mile Creek State Park, NY 18 turns a full 90 degrees to the east and begins to parallel the southern shore of Lake Ontario. Here, NY 18 meets the northern terminus of NY 18F, changes names from Creek Road to Lake Road, and becomes part of the Seaway Trail, a National Scenic Byway. The route proceeds northeast to Four Mile Creek State Park, where it intersects the northern end of the Niagara Scenic Parkway. East of the park, NY 18 gradually moves to the north, decreasing the area between the route and the lakeshore as it proceeds east.[3]

Now in Wilson and less than 100 yards (91 m) from the lakeshore, NY 18 meets the northern terminus of NY 425. Farther east, in Olcott, NY 18 intersects the northern extent of NY 78. On the eastern edge of town, the route intersects Transit Road, which runs along the transit line first surveyed by the Holland Land Company. This portion of Transit Road does not meet the NY 78-occupied portion in Lockport, however. After meeting the northern end of NY 148 in Somerset, NY 18 intersects the northern terminus of NY 269 at the Niagara–Orleans County line.[3]

Orleans County edit

 
Northbound on NY 18 (west) and NY 272 along the Orleans–Monroe County line

Across the county line, NY 18 becomes the Roosevelt Highway. It continues across the northern edge of the county and the southern fringe of Lake Ontario, meeting the northern terminus of NY 63 in Yates Center, north of Lyndonville. While NY 63 ends here,[3] Lyndonville Road continues north to the lake as County Route 63-1 (CR 63-1).[4] This portion of Lyndonville Road was once part of NY 63.[5] In Carlton, NY 18 intersects the northern terminus of NY 279, the last in a series of north–south routes that terminate at NY 18. Not far to the east, the route serves Lakeside Beach State Park and indirectly connects to the western terminus of the Lake Ontario State Parkway. At this point, the Seaway Trail leaves NY 18 to follow the parkway along the lakeshore.[3]

East of the park, NY 18 breaks from the Lake Ontario shore and begins to make its way southward, curving to the southeast as it meets NY 98 north of the hamlet of Baldwin Corner. The routes converge to form a concurrency south to the hamlet, where NY 18 continues east. At the Carlton–Kendall town line, NY 18 curves southeastward once again before reverting to an easterly alignment in Kendall. After passing NY 237 south of the hamlet of Kendall, NY 18 intersects NY 272 at the Orleans–Monroe County line. NY 18 merges onto the county line road, overlapping NY 272 along the county line for just under 1 mile (1.6 km) to the continuation of Roosevelt Highway, where NY 18 continues east into Monroe County.[3]

Monroe County edit

NY 18 remains Roosevelt Highway until Hamlin–Parma Town Line Road, where is becomes West Avenue. In the hamlet of Hamlin, it meets NY 19. NY 18 passes NY 260 before swerving northward onto West Avenue at the Hamlin–Parma town line and proceeding eastward toward the village of Hilton. In Hilton, NY 18 meets NY 259 (Lake Avenue) in the center of the village. The two routes overlap for a short distance east along Main Street before turning south to exit the village on South Avenue.[3]

 
NY 18 eastbound in Rochester about a half-mile north of NY 104

NY 18 and NY 259, now named Hilton–Parma Corners Road, remain concurrent until Parma Center, where NY 18 turns east to follow Parma Center Road for roughly 2 miles (3.2 km) through a rural portion of Parma. Parma Center Road ends upon intersecting NY 261 (Manitou Road) at the Parma–Greece town line; as a result, NY 18 joins NY 261 for one block southward before returning east on Latta Road and entering the Rochester suburb of Greece. NY 18 passes through the rural northwestern part of the town and the more developed, densely populated northeastern section, meeting NY 390 at exit 26 in the latter. The junction is the northernmost exit on NY 390 prior to its merging with the Lake Ontario State Parkway to the north.[3]

A small distance east of NY 390, NY 18 passes Greece Arcadia High School and intersects Mount Read Boulevard in the hamlet of Mount Read before intersecting Dewey Avenue a half-mile to the east. NY 18 turns south onto Dewey Avenue;[3] however, state maintenance continues to follow Latta Road east to where it crosses into the Rochester city limits at Charlotte.[6] This section of Latta Road is designated as NY 941A, an unsigned reference route.[7] NY 18, meanwhile, becomes maintained by Monroe County as part of CR 132, an unsigned designation that follows Dewey Avenue north to its end at the Lake Ontario shoreline.[6] The route continues south on Dewey Avenue to the Rochester city line, where CR 132 ends and maintenance of the route shifts to the city of Rochester.[8] NY 18 ends about 1 mile (1.6 km) later at a junction with NY 104 in an industrialized area known as Eastman Business Park.[3]

History edit

Origins and early changes edit

 
Looking west at the junction of NY 18 and NY 19 in Hamlin. NY 18 initially turned right here and followed modern NY 19 and the now-decommissioned NY 360 into Orleans County.

In 1908, the New York State Legislature created Route 18, an unsigned legislative route that ran from the Pennsylvania state line at Ripley to the mouth of the Niagara River north of Youngstown with a gap through the city of Buffalo. North of Buffalo, Route 18 followed Niagara Falls Boulevard (modern NY 950K and U.S. Route 62 or US 62) to Niagara Falls and current NY 104 and NY 18F between Niagara Falls and Lake Ontario.[9][10] When the first set of posted routes in New York were assigned in 1924, the portion of legislative Route 18 north of Buffalo became the basis for NY 34, which began at Main Street (NY 5) in Buffalo and followed the path of legislative Route 18 through Niagara Falls and along the Niagara River to Lake Ontario. NY 18 was assigned at the same time; however, it initially went from the Pennsylvania state line at Limestone north to Buffalo along what is now US 219, NY 417, NY 353 and US 62. In Cattaraugus County, NY 18 initially followed Leon and New Albion Roads between Cattaraugus and Little Valley.[2][11]

NY 18 was extended northeastward to Rochester as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, effectively doubling the route's length.[12] Instead of ending at the junction of Ohio and Main Streets (the latter then part of NY 5) in downtown Buffalo, NY 18 now overlapped with NY 5 along Main Street north to Niagara Falls Boulevard,[13][14] where it turned north and proceeded to Lake Ontario over NY 34. At Youngstown, the route turned east, following a previously unnumbered alignment along the lakeshore to Rochester, where it ended at NY 31 (now NY 104) in Kodak Park.[12] The route was extended further eastward to NY 250 in Webster by the following year by way of East Ridge Road, Culver Road, and Lake Road.[15] NY 18 was never extended eastward past its junction with NY 250.[16][17][18]

While the general routing of NY 18 between Youngstown and Rochester was the same in 1930 as it is now, it initially followed a slightly different alignment through eastern Orleans County and western Monroe County. NY 18 broke from its current alignment at Carr Road and followed Carr, Kenmore and Kendall Roads through the town of Kendall to the hamlet of Morton, from where it continued to Hamlin via the now-decommissioned NY 360 and NY 19. Additionally, NY 18 utilized Hamlin Center Road and what is now NY 260 between Hamlin and Roosevelt Highway.[12][14]

 
March 2008 photo of a reference marker for NY 18 on Lake Road in Webster

The majority of NY 18's routing south of the village of Lewiston was incorporated into the U.S. Highway System in the early 1930s after US 62 and US 219 were extended into New York and US 104 was assigned. NY 18 now began concurrent to US 219 at the state line and overlapped the route northward to the city of Salamanca. US 219 left NY 18 here, and the latter continued independently to the town of Dayton, where it intersected US 62. From there, US 62 followed NY 18 north to a junction with US 104 (Main Street) in Niagara Falls. US 62 ended here, and NY 18 became concurrent to US 104 upon turning onto Main Street. The overlap ended in the village of Lewiston, where US 104 turned east to follow Ridge Road instead.[14][19]

Realignments and truncation edit

By 1931, NY 18 was realigned to follow its current alignment between Hamlin and the Parma town line while the modern routing of NY 18 between the Orleans County line and Hamlin was designated as NY 360.[15] The alignments of NY 360 and NY 18 between NY 272 and Hamlin were flipped c. 1933, placing both routes on their modern routings through Hamlin.[20][21] NY 18 was moved onto its present routing through Kendall c. 1938, bypassing the hamlets of Kendall and Morton to the south.[22][23] In the Buffalo area, NY 18 was realigned twice in the 1930s: first by 1935 to bypass downtown to the east on Bailey Avenue between Abbott Road and Main Street[19] and again in the late 1930s to use Bailey Avenue and Eggert Road between Main Street and Niagara Falls Boulevard.[24][25] The Cattaraugus–Little Valley segment of the route was realigned c. 1934 to travel directly between the two locations. Its former routing via New Albion became NY 18F;[21][26] however, that designation was eliminated c. 1938, and ownership of the New Albion route was transferred to Cattaraugus County, which has maintained it as portions of County Routes 5 and 6 ever since.[22][23]

 
August 2009 photo of a reference marker for NY 18 on NY 590 in Irondequoit

NY 18 was rerouted between Lewiston and Youngstown on January 1, 1949, to follow a more inland highway through western Niagara County. The former routing of NY 18 alongside the Niagara River was redesignated as NY 18F.[27] To the east in Rochester, NY 18 was realigned in the early 1950s to follow East Ridge Road east to the then-southern terminus of the Sea Breeze Expressway. The route turned north, following the highway to its end at Culver Road, where it rejoined its pre-expressway alignment.[17][28] The western terminus of NY 18 was moved north to its present location in Lewiston on January 1, 1962,[29] eliminating the three lengthy overlaps that existed between Pennsylvania and Lewiston. The lone independent portion of NY 18 south of Lewiston was renumbered NY 353.[30][31]

On January 1, 1970, NY 47 was extended northward to encompass the entirety of the now-complete Sea Breeze Expressway, creating an overlap with NY 18 between Ridge and Culver Roads.[32] Prior to the extension, NY 47 had ended at Empire Boulevard (US 104, now NY 404).[33] The overlap proved to be temporary as NY 18 was truncated westward c. 1973 to its current eastern terminus in Kodak Park.[34][35] The former routing of NY 18 between NY 590 and NY 250 was redesignated as NY 941L, an unsigned reference route.[36] East Ridge Road, meanwhile, was now devoid of any designations as US 104 had been shifted onto the Keeler Street Expressway several years before.[33][37] As a result, ownership and maintenance of the Irondequoit section of East Ridge Road was transferred to Monroe County, which designated it as the unsigned CR 241. Culver Road, meanwhile, is now CR 120.[38]

Olcott realignment edit

The alignment of NY 18 through Olcott Beach dated back to the early 1800s, starting with a foot bridge over Eighteen Mile Creek in 1811, built out of wood. This was replaced by a white oak frame bridge built in 1825 for $500 (1825 USD) for the use of transporting wagons across the creek. General James Weisner contracted to build the bridge, which was 77 feet (23 m) wide, along with 20 20-foot (6.1 m) long spans. That bridge was replaced in 1878 by an iron structure with dimensions of 100 by 22 feet (30.5 m × 6.7 m). This new span was a swing bridge, compared to the prior fixed structures. The New York State Department of Public Works replaced that structure with another fixed span in 1935. This span was too low to the water line, causing a bottleneck of boats and ships entering Eighteen Mile Creek. This two-lane structure was a 160-foot (49 m) long structure, that also caused a bottleneck for drivers because there became no parking in Olcott.[39]

 
Former NY 18 alignment in Olcott approaching the old bridge built in 1935

Frustration grew in the 1960s to this low-level bridge. This involved a community movement to get a new bridge built through Olcott in 1966. This would involve razing the former span from 1935 and opening Eighteen Mile Creek back to the boaters who could not fit under the span. The creek, navigable from nearby Burt, would get more use without the bridge blocking the boats from entering. A new bridge would need to be a 40–50 feet (12–15 m) high, compared to 3–4 feet (0.91–1.22 m), which the older structure was. Residents felt that if they got a new bridge built, they could make at least $60,00 for attracting schooners to Olcott. They felt that with boat owners, Olcott's average income would skyrocket to $500,000 a year. The construction of a new bridge would expand the harbor in Olcott overall. The petition for a new bridge attracted almost 400 signatures from local residents, boaters and landowners.[40]

This petition reached State Senator Earl W. Brydges, a resident of Wilson. He drafted legislation to fund $500,000 to the Department of Public Works to construct a new bridge in Olcott. Assemblyman V. Sumner Carroll of Niagara Falls followed with the Assembly. Initial estimates for a new bridge, located south of the current structure, would be $370,000. This would keep traffic flow from being interrupted for construction, building an improved alignment of NY 18. The right-of-way costs would be cheaper and the harbor would have a new structure to appease the design of the area.[40]

By February 1967 the support for a new bridge grew locally. The bridge, which now cost over $1.75 million to build, would be 50 feet (15 m) high. Engineers suggested that 32 feet (9.8 m) would be the highest rebuilding the current structure could go. Engineers also considered alternate concepts, but the design of the area prohibited any options besides a new bridge. This new bridge would involve building an approach at West Creek Road near the local water tower. This would bypass downtown Olcott to the south, crossing Eighteen Mile Creek before reaching a junction with NY 78 850 feet (260 m) south of the current intersection between NY 18 and NY 78. The alignment would then cross Franklin Street and through nearby Krull Park where it would meet then-current NY 18. This new alignment would be 1 mile (1.6 km) long, coming at the cost of 16 structures. This would include farm buildings, barber shop, gas station and a few homes. Some locals asked if the construction would be superfluous with the construction of the nearby Lake Ontario State Parkway, which they stated would be several miles south of Olcott.[41]

 
The new bridge over Eighteen Mile Creek built in Olcott from 1968–1970, seen from the old structure's location upstream

By January 1968, the number of properties affected rose to 67, with 20 homes affected in various fashions. The new bridge would cost $1.1 million, would be 525 feet (160 m) long, with four lanes 12 feet (3.7 m) wide. The new approaches to the bridge would cost $1.4 million to build. At that point, the Department of Public Works speculated construction would begin in 1968.[42] Meanwhile, money was granted for the study of widening the Olcott harbor channel for boaters.[43] On June 21, 1968, it was announced that the Tuscarora Construction Company of Amherst made a winning $2,578,783 bid for construction of the bridge and its approaches.[44]

Construction began in August 1968, with land clearing and construction of the physical bridge in October 1968. The New York State Department of Transportation said the project would be complete by December 1, 1970.[45] Construction rapidly advanced through 1968 into and into 1969, with the new piers being built by April 1969. Concrete was being poured in the piers, while power, gas and electric lines were being realigned for construction.[46] With the construction running ahead of schedule, there was a belief that the project could be finished ahead of schedule. Construction of abutments was to start soon in May 1969.[47]

The process was so rapidly advancing that despite the late delivery of steel in October 1969 for the new structure, it failed to stop the construction.[48] The rapid pace continued into 1970, with the construction ahead of the new November 15, 1970, deadline.[49] However, construction continued until the bridge opened on November 9, 1970, to traffic at 11 am.[50]

The Army Corps of Engineers expanded navigation of Eighteen Mile Creek to Burt in February 1972 thanks to bridge construction.[51] However, despite the new bridge, the history of bridges at Olcott caused problems for boaters. Despite the old bridge being torn out, the pilings of the 1878 structure were still present 2–3 feet (0.61–0.91 m) underwater.[52]

Suffixed routes edit

NY 18 has had seven suffixed routes using six designations; only one, NY 18F, still exists. Most of the routes were renumbered when NY 18 was truncated to Lewiston c. 1962.

 
NY 18E's former alignment in the Earl W. Brydges Artpark State Park

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
NiagaraVillage of Lewiston0.000.00  NY 104 – Canada, BuffaloWestern terminus, interchange
Town of Lewiston1.001.61  NY 104
Porter6.9911.25  NY 93 – Youngstown, LockportHamlet of Towers Corners
7.7512.47 
 
NY 18F south / Great Lakes Seaway Trail
Northern terminus of NY 18F
8.5513.76  Niagara Scenic Parkway – Fort Niagara, Youngstown, Niagara FallsNorthern terminus of Niagara Scenic Parkway
Village of Wilson17.8528.73 
 
NY 425 south – Business District
Northern terminus of NY 425
Newfane23.7138.16 
 
NY 78 south
Northern terminus of NY 78; hamlet of Olcott
Somerset31.8551.26 
 
NY 148 south – Barker
Northern terminus of NY 148
NiagaraOrleans
county line
SomersetYates
town line
36.3958.56 
 
NY 269 south
Northern terminus of NY 269
OrleansYates40.2864.82 
 
NY 63 south – Lyndonville
Northern terminus of NY 63
Carlton47.2175.98 
 
NY 279 south
Northern terminus of NY 279
48.2177.59 
 
Lakeside Beach Road / Great Lakes Seaway Trail to Lake Ontario State Parkway – Lakeside Beach State Park, Rochester
Western terminus of Lake Ontario Parkway; exit closed between December and March
50.7981.74 
 
NY 98 north – Point Breeze
Hamlet of The Bridges; northern terminus of NY 18 / NY 98 overlap
51.3382.61 
 
NY 98 south
Hamlet of Baldwin Corner; southern terminus of NY 18 / NY 98 overlap
51.6383.09 
 
 
To NY 98 south via Roosevelt Highway ( NY 941M)
Eastern terminus of unsigned NY 941M; to NY 98 south only signed westbound; hamlet of Baldwin Corner
Kendall59.9996.54  NY 237
OrleansMonroe
county line
KendallHamlin
town line
62.20100.10 
 
NY 272 north
Northern terminus of NY 18 / NY 272 overlap
63.18101.68 
 
NY 272 south
Southern terminus of NY 18 / NY 272 overlap; hamlet of Kendall Mills
MonroeHamlin67.12108.02  NY 19; hamlet of Hamlin
ClarksonHamlin
town line
70.15112.90  NY 260
Hilton73.96119.03 
 
NY 259 north
Northern terminus of NY 18 / NY 259 overlap
Parma76.05122.39 
 
NY 259 south
Hamlet of Parma Center; southern terminus of NY 18 / NY 259 overlap
ParmaGreece
town line
78.07125.64 
 
NY 261 north
Northern terminus of NY 18 / NY 261 overlap
78.41126.19 
 
NY 261 south
Southern terminus of NY 18 / NY 261 overlap
Town of Greece82.61132.95  
 
NY 390 to Lake Ontario State Parkway
Exit 26 (NY 390); hamlet of Mount Read
83.67134.65Latta Road ( NY 941A)Western terminus of unsigned NY 941A
Rochester87.40140.66  NY 104Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j New York State Map (Map). Cartography by Map Works. I Love New York. 2008.
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  5. ^ New York (Map) (1977–78 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Exxon. 1977.
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  32. ^ State of New York Department of Transportation (January 1, 1970). Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State (PDF). Retrieved July 17, 2009.
  33. ^ a b New York (Map) (1969–70 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1968.
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  35. ^ New York (Map) (1973 ed.). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Shell Oil Company. 1973.
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  37. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Humble Oil & Refining Company. 1971.
  38. ^ Rochester East Digital Raster Quadrangle (Map). 1:24,000. New York State Department of Transportation. 1997. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
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  40. ^ a b Toth, Marilou (May 26, 1966). "Bridge-Harbor Updating Project Gaining Support In Olcott Area". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. p. 1. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  41. ^ Toth, Marilou (February 10, 1967). "Capacity Crowd Approves New Olcott Bridge Plans". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. p. 9. Retrieved October 9, 2018.
  42. ^ Kielar, Evelyn (January 16, 1968). "Olcott Bridge Affects 67 Properties". The Niagara Falls Gazette. p. 12. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  43. ^ "Relocated $1.75-Million Bridge At Olcott Would Carry Four Lanes Across Creek". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. January 12, 1968. p. 1. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  44. ^ "$2.5 Million Is Bid For Olcott Project". The Courier-Express. June 21, 1968. p. 13. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  45. ^ LaSpada, S.J. (October 1968). "Work Under Way on $2.6 Million Bridge, Road Project In Olcott". The Niagara Falls Gazette. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  46. ^ "Work On New Olcott Bridge Running Ahead Of Schedule". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. April 26, 1969. p. 10. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  47. ^ "Olcott Bridge Construction Proceeding at 'Rapid Pace'". The Niagara Falls Gazette. May 1969. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  48. ^ Boone, Jerry F. (October 3, 1969). "Tardy Delivery Of Steel Fails To Halt Olcott Bridge Progress". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. p. 11. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  49. ^ "New $2.7 Million Olcott Bridge Progressing Ahead Of Schedule". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. July 30, 1970. p. 11. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  50. ^ "New Bridge At Olcott Open Monday". The Niagara Falls Gazette. November 7, 1970. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  51. ^ "Creek Limits Are Extended". The Niagara Falls Gazette. February 12, 1972. p. 7. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  52. ^ "Pilings Of Old Bridge Structure Perils Boating At Olcott Harbor". The Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. July 22, 1972. p. 9. Retrieved October 10, 2018.
  53. ^ "Weekly Report On Road Conditions In This District" (PDF). Lockport Union-Sun and Journal. June 10, 1930. p. 2. Retrieved December 16, 2018.
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  55. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company. 1937.
  56. ^ (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Cities Service Company. 1960. Archived from the original on August 26, 2008. Retrieved December 5, 2007.
  57. ^ (Map). Cartography by Rolph-Clark-Stone. White Rose. 1963. Archived from the original on August 26, 2008. Retrieved December 5, 2007.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • New York State Route 18 at Alps' Roads • New York Routes

york, state, route, redirects, here, term, also, refer, york, 18th, congressional, district, east, west, state, highway, western, york, united, states, runs, parallel, south, shore, lake, ontario, most, length, between, niagara, county, monroe, county, which, . NY 18 redirects here The term may also refer to New York s 18th congressional district New York State Route 18 NY 18 is an east west state highway in western New York in the United States It runs parallel to the south shore of Lake Ontario for most of its length between Niagara County and Monroe County NY 18 which also passes through Orleans County acts as a northerly alternate to NY 104 another east west route that parallels NY 18 to the south on Ridge Road The western terminus of NY 18 is at a complex grade separated interchange with NY 104 outside the village of Lewiston Its eastern terminus is at a junction with NY 104 in an area of Rochester known as Eastman Business Park New York State Route 18Map of western New York with NY 18 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NYSDOT Monroe County and the city of RochesterLength87 40 mi 1 140 66 km Existed1924 2 presentTouristroutesGreat Lakes Seaway TrailMajor junctionsWest endNY 104 in LewistonMajor intersectionsNiagara Scenic Parkway in Youngstown NY 78 in Olcott Lake Ontario State Parkway in Carlton NY 390 in GreeceEast endNY 104 in RochesterLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkCountiesNiagara Orleans MonroeHighway systemNew York HighwaysInterstate US State Reference Parkways NY 17M NY 18ANY 18 was assigned in 1924 and originally extended from the Pennsylvania state line near Salamanca to downtown Buffalo via Dayton and Hamburg It was extended northeast to Rochester via Niagara Falls as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York and east to NY 250 in the town of Webster by the following year NY 18 was truncated on its west end to the town of Lewiston in the early 1960s and on its east end to Rochester in the early 1970s Although NY 18 is signed as east west it runs primarily north south through the western portion of Niagara County After leaving Niagara County NY 18 shifts farther south gradually moving away from the shore of Lake Ontario In central Orleans County NY 18 meets the Lake Ontario State Parkway at the Lakeside Beach State Park The parkway then becomes the lakeside road and NY 18 veers south to follow a more inland routing Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Niagara County 1 2 Orleans County 1 3 Monroe County 2 History 2 1 Origins and early changes 2 2 Realignments and truncation 2 3 Olcott realignment 3 Suffixed routes 4 Major intersections 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editNiagara County edit nbsp NY 18 northwest of Model CityNY 18 begins at a junction with NY 104 south of a complex grade separated interchange that includes NY 18F NY 104 and the Niagara Scenic Parkway on the eastern edge of the village of Lewiston From NY 104 east a right turn ramp allows access to Creek Road Extension the first street that modern day NY 18 occupies NY 104 continues north from the ramp passing over NY 18 westbound which terminates at the merge ramp with NY 104 west on its way to the village while NY 18 proceeds to the northeast on Creek Road Extension bypassing Lewiston to the southeast After 0 5 miles 0 8 km the highway curves to the north and meets NY 104 at an unconventional grade separated interchange that has a pair of two way ramps connecting the two state routes NY 18 continues on passing under NY 104 and paralleling the Niagara Scenic Parkway as it proceeds north 3 At a wye in the Porter hamlet of Blairville NY 18 breaks from its north south alignment and turns to the northeast before curving northward once more returning to a perfect north south alignment at an intersection with NY 93 in the hamlet of Towers Corners Southwest of the Four Mile Creek State Park NY 18 turns a full 90 degrees to the east and begins to parallel the southern shore of Lake Ontario Here NY 18 meets the northern terminus of NY 18F changes names from Creek Road to Lake Road and becomes part of the Seaway Trail a National Scenic Byway The route proceeds northeast to Four Mile Creek State Park where it intersects the northern end of the Niagara Scenic Parkway East of the park NY 18 gradually moves to the north decreasing the area between the route and the lakeshore as it proceeds east 3 Now in Wilson and less than 100 yards 91 m from the lakeshore NY 18 meets the northern terminus of NY 425 Farther east in Olcott NY 18 intersects the northern extent of NY 78 On the eastern edge of town the route intersects Transit Road which runs along the transit line first surveyed by the Holland Land Company This portion of Transit Road does not meet the NY 78 occupied portion in Lockport however After meeting the northern end of NY 148 in Somerset NY 18 intersects the northern terminus of NY 269 at the Niagara Orleans County line 3 Orleans County edit nbsp Northbound on NY 18 west and NY 272 along the Orleans Monroe County lineAcross the county line NY 18 becomes the Roosevelt Highway It continues across the northern edge of the county and the southern fringe of Lake Ontario meeting the northern terminus of NY 63 in Yates Center north of Lyndonville While NY 63 ends here 3 Lyndonville Road continues north to the lake as County Route 63 1 CR 63 1 4 This portion of Lyndonville Road was once part of NY 63 5 In Carlton NY 18 intersects the northern terminus of NY 279 the last in a series of north south routes that terminate at NY 18 Not far to the east the route serves Lakeside Beach State Park and indirectly connects to the western terminus of the Lake Ontario State Parkway At this point the Seaway Trail leaves NY 18 to follow the parkway along the lakeshore 3 East of the park NY 18 breaks from the Lake Ontario shore and begins to make its way southward curving to the southeast as it meets NY 98 north of the hamlet of Baldwin Corner The routes converge to form a concurrency south to the hamlet where NY 18 continues east At the Carlton Kendall town line NY 18 curves southeastward once again before reverting to an easterly alignment in Kendall After passing NY 237 south of the hamlet of Kendall NY 18 intersects NY 272 at the Orleans Monroe County line NY 18 merges onto the county line road overlapping NY 272 along the county line for just under 1 mile 1 6 km to the continuation of Roosevelt Highway where NY 18 continues east into Monroe County 3 Monroe County edit NY 18 remains Roosevelt Highway until Hamlin Parma Town Line Road where is becomes West Avenue In the hamlet of Hamlin it meets NY 19 NY 18 passes NY 260 before swerving northward onto West Avenue at the Hamlin Parma town line and proceeding eastward toward the village of Hilton In Hilton NY 18 meets NY 259 Lake Avenue in the center of the village The two routes overlap for a short distance east along Main Street before turning south to exit the village on South Avenue 3 nbsp NY 18 eastbound in Rochester about a half mile north of NY 104NY 18 and NY 259 now named Hilton Parma Corners Road remain concurrent until Parma Center where NY 18 turns east to follow Parma Center Road for roughly 2 miles 3 2 km through a rural portion of Parma Parma Center Road ends upon intersecting NY 261 Manitou Road at the Parma Greece town line as a result NY 18 joins NY 261 for one block southward before returning east on Latta Road and entering the Rochester suburb of Greece NY 18 passes through the rural northwestern part of the town and the more developed densely populated northeastern section meeting NY 390 at exit 26 in the latter The junction is the northernmost exit on NY 390 prior to its merging with the Lake Ontario State Parkway to the north 3 A small distance east of NY 390 NY 18 passes Greece Arcadia High School and intersects Mount Read Boulevard in the hamlet of Mount Read before intersecting Dewey Avenue a half mile to the east NY 18 turns south onto Dewey Avenue 3 however state maintenance continues to follow Latta Road east to where it crosses into the Rochester city limits at Charlotte 6 This section of Latta Road is designated as NY 941A an unsigned reference route 7 NY 18 meanwhile becomes maintained by Monroe County as part of CR 132 an unsigned designation that follows Dewey Avenue north to its end at the Lake Ontario shoreline 6 The route continues south on Dewey Avenue to the Rochester city line where CR 132 ends and maintenance of the route shifts to the city of Rochester 8 NY 18 ends about 1 mile 1 6 km later at a junction with NY 104 in an industrialized area known as Eastman Business Park 3 History editOrigins and early changes edit nbsp Looking west at the junction of NY 18 and NY 19 in Hamlin NY 18 initially turned right here and followed modern NY 19 and the now decommissioned NY 360 into Orleans County In 1908 the New York State Legislature created Route 18 an unsigned legislative route that ran from the Pennsylvania state line at Ripley to the mouth of the Niagara River north of Youngstown with a gap through the city of Buffalo North of Buffalo Route 18 followed Niagara Falls Boulevard modern NY 950K and U S Route 62 or US 62 to Niagara Falls and current NY 104 and NY 18F between Niagara Falls and Lake Ontario 9 10 When the first set of posted routes in New York were assigned in 1924 the portion of legislative Route 18 north of Buffalo became the basis for NY 34 which began at Main Street NY 5 in Buffalo and followed the path of legislative Route 18 through Niagara Falls and along the Niagara River to Lake Ontario NY 18 was assigned at the same time however it initially went from the Pennsylvania state line at Limestone north to Buffalo along what is now US 219 NY 417 NY 353 and US 62 In Cattaraugus County NY 18 initially followed Leon and New Albion Roads between Cattaraugus and Little Valley 2 11 NY 18 was extended northeastward to Rochester as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York effectively doubling the route s length 12 Instead of ending at the junction of Ohio and Main Streets the latter then part of NY 5 in downtown Buffalo NY 18 now overlapped with NY 5 along Main Street north to Niagara Falls Boulevard 13 14 where it turned north and proceeded to Lake Ontario over NY 34 At Youngstown the route turned east following a previously unnumbered alignment along the lakeshore to Rochester where it ended at NY 31 now NY 104 in Kodak Park 12 The route was extended further eastward to NY 250 in Webster by the following year by way of East Ridge Road Culver Road and Lake Road 15 NY 18 was never extended eastward past its junction with NY 250 16 17 18 While the general routing of NY 18 between Youngstown and Rochester was the same in 1930 as it is now it initially followed a slightly different alignment through eastern Orleans County and western Monroe County NY 18 broke from its current alignment at Carr Road and followed Carr Kenmore and Kendall Roads through the town of Kendall to the hamlet of Morton from where it continued to Hamlin via the now decommissioned NY 360 and NY 19 Additionally NY 18 utilized Hamlin Center Road and what is now NY 260 between Hamlin and Roosevelt Highway 12 14 nbsp March 2008 photo of a reference marker for NY 18 on Lake Road in WebsterThe majority of NY 18 s routing south of the village of Lewiston was incorporated into the U S Highway System in the early 1930s after US 62 and US 219 were extended into New York and US 104 was assigned NY 18 now began concurrent to US 219 at the state line and overlapped the route northward to the city of Salamanca US 219 left NY 18 here and the latter continued independently to the town of Dayton where it intersected US 62 From there US 62 followed NY 18 north to a junction with US 104 Main Street in Niagara Falls US 62 ended here and NY 18 became concurrent to US 104 upon turning onto Main Street The overlap ended in the village of Lewiston where US 104 turned east to follow Ridge Road instead 14 19 Realignments and truncation edit By 1931 NY 18 was realigned to follow its current alignment between Hamlin and the Parma town line while the modern routing of NY 18 between the Orleans County line and Hamlin was designated as NY 360 15 The alignments of NY 360 and NY 18 between NY 272 and Hamlin were flipped c 1933 placing both routes on their modern routings through Hamlin 20 21 NY 18 was moved onto its present routing through Kendall c 1938 bypassing the hamlets of Kendall and Morton to the south 22 23 In the Buffalo area NY 18 was realigned twice in the 1930s first by 1935 to bypass downtown to the east on Bailey Avenue between Abbott Road and Main Street 19 and again in the late 1930s to use Bailey Avenue and Eggert Road between Main Street and Niagara Falls Boulevard 24 25 The Cattaraugus Little Valley segment of the route was realigned c 1934 to travel directly between the two locations Its former routing via New Albion became NY 18F 21 26 however that designation was eliminated c 1938 and ownership of the New Albion route was transferred to Cattaraugus County which has maintained it as portions of County Routes 5 and 6 ever since 22 23 nbsp August 2009 photo of a reference marker for NY 18 on NY 590 in IrondequoitNY 18 was rerouted between Lewiston and Youngstown on January 1 1949 to follow a more inland highway through western Niagara County The former routing of NY 18 alongside the Niagara River was redesignated as NY 18F 27 To the east in Rochester NY 18 was realigned in the early 1950s to follow East Ridge Road east to the then southern terminus of the Sea Breeze Expressway The route turned north following the highway to its end at Culver Road where it rejoined its pre expressway alignment 17 28 The western terminus of NY 18 was moved north to its present location in Lewiston on January 1 1962 29 eliminating the three lengthy overlaps that existed between Pennsylvania and Lewiston The lone independent portion of NY 18 south of Lewiston was renumbered NY 353 30 31 On January 1 1970 NY 47 was extended northward to encompass the entirety of the now complete Sea Breeze Expressway creating an overlap with NY 18 between Ridge and Culver Roads 32 Prior to the extension NY 47 had ended at Empire Boulevard US 104 now NY 404 33 The overlap proved to be temporary as NY 18 was truncated westward c 1973 to its current eastern terminus in Kodak Park 34 35 The former routing of NY 18 between NY 590 and NY 250 was redesignated as NY 941L an unsigned reference route 36 East Ridge Road meanwhile was now devoid of any designations as US 104 had been shifted onto the Keeler Street Expressway several years before 33 37 As a result ownership and maintenance of the Irondequoit section of East Ridge Road was transferred to Monroe County which designated it as the unsigned CR 241 Culver Road meanwhile is now CR 120 38 Olcott realignment edit The alignment of NY 18 through Olcott Beach dated back to the early 1800s starting with a foot bridge over Eighteen Mile Creek in 1811 built out of wood This was replaced by a white oak frame bridge built in 1825 for 500 1825 USD for the use of transporting wagons across the creek General James Weisner contracted to build the bridge which was 77 feet 23 m wide along with 20 20 foot 6 1 m long spans That bridge was replaced in 1878 by an iron structure with dimensions of 100 by 22 feet 30 5 m 6 7 m This new span was a swing bridge compared to the prior fixed structures The New York State Department of Public Works replaced that structure with another fixed span in 1935 This span was too low to the water line causing a bottleneck of boats and ships entering Eighteen Mile Creek This two lane structure was a 160 foot 49 m long structure that also caused a bottleneck for drivers because there became no parking in Olcott 39 nbsp Former NY 18 alignment in Olcott approaching the old bridge built in 1935Frustration grew in the 1960s to this low level bridge This involved a community movement to get a new bridge built through Olcott in 1966 This would involve razing the former span from 1935 and opening Eighteen Mile Creek back to the boaters who could not fit under the span The creek navigable from nearby Burt would get more use without the bridge blocking the boats from entering A new bridge would need to be a 40 50 feet 12 15 m high compared to 3 4 feet 0 91 1 22 m which the older structure was Residents felt that if they got a new bridge built they could make at least 60 00 for attracting schooners to Olcott They felt that with boat owners Olcott s average income would skyrocket to 500 000 a year The construction of a new bridge would expand the harbor in Olcott overall The petition for a new bridge attracted almost 400 signatures from local residents boaters and landowners 40 This petition reached State Senator Earl W Brydges a resident of Wilson He drafted legislation to fund 500 000 to the Department of Public Works to construct a new bridge in Olcott Assemblyman V Sumner Carroll of Niagara Falls followed with the Assembly Initial estimates for a new bridge located south of the current structure would be 370 000 This would keep traffic flow from being interrupted for construction building an improved alignment of NY 18 The right of way costs would be cheaper and the harbor would have a new structure to appease the design of the area 40 By February 1967 the support for a new bridge grew locally The bridge which now cost over 1 75 million to build would be 50 feet 15 m high Engineers suggested that 32 feet 9 8 m would be the highest rebuilding the current structure could go Engineers also considered alternate concepts but the design of the area prohibited any options besides a new bridge This new bridge would involve building an approach at West Creek Road near the local water tower This would bypass downtown Olcott to the south crossing Eighteen Mile Creek before reaching a junction with NY 78 850 feet 260 m south of the current intersection between NY 18 and NY 78 The alignment would then cross Franklin Street and through nearby Krull Park where it would meet then current NY 18 This new alignment would be 1 mile 1 6 km long coming at the cost of 16 structures This would include farm buildings barber shop gas station and a few homes Some locals asked if the construction would be superfluous with the construction of the nearby Lake Ontario State Parkway which they stated would be several miles south of Olcott 41 nbsp The new bridge over Eighteen Mile Creek built in Olcott from 1968 1970 seen from the old structure s location upstreamBy January 1968 the number of properties affected rose to 67 with 20 homes affected in various fashions The new bridge would cost 1 1 million would be 525 feet 160 m long with four lanes 12 feet 3 7 m wide The new approaches to the bridge would cost 1 4 million to build At that point the Department of Public Works speculated construction would begin in 1968 42 Meanwhile money was granted for the study of widening the Olcott harbor channel for boaters 43 On June 21 1968 it was announced that the Tuscarora Construction Company of Amherst made a winning 2 578 783 bid for construction of the bridge and its approaches 44 Construction began in August 1968 with land clearing and construction of the physical bridge in October 1968 The New York State Department of Transportation said the project would be complete by December 1 1970 45 Construction rapidly advanced through 1968 into and into 1969 with the new piers being built by April 1969 Concrete was being poured in the piers while power gas and electric lines were being realigned for construction 46 With the construction running ahead of schedule there was a belief that the project could be finished ahead of schedule Construction of abutments was to start soon in May 1969 47 The process was so rapidly advancing that despite the late delivery of steel in October 1969 for the new structure it failed to stop the construction 48 The rapid pace continued into 1970 with the construction ahead of the new November 15 1970 deadline 49 However construction continued until the bridge opened on November 9 1970 to traffic at 11 am 50 The Army Corps of Engineers expanded navigation of Eighteen Mile Creek to Burt in February 1972 thanks to bridge construction 51 However despite the new bridge the history of bridges at Olcott caused problems for boaters Despite the old bridge being torn out the pilings of the 1878 structure were still present 2 3 feet 0 61 0 91 m underwater 52 Suffixed routes editNY 18 has had seven suffixed routes using six designations only one NY 18F still exists Most of the routes were renumbered when NY 18 was truncated to Lewiston c 1962 NY 18A was an alternate route of NY 18 between Collins and Hamburg It was assigned in 1930 53 and mostly replaced with an extended NY 75 c 1962 30 31 NY 18B was an alternate route of NY 18 through the eastern suburbs of Buffalo It was assigned c 1935 19 26 and mostly replaced with an extended NY 277 c 1962 30 31 nbsp NY 18E s former alignment in the Earl W Brydges Artpark State ParkNY 18C was a short lived alternate route of NY 18 through the eastern Buffalo suburbs It was assigned c 1932 15 20 and began at NY 18 now US 62 at Big Tree in Hamburg and followed Big Tree Road and modern US 20 to NY 35 now US 20 and NY 130 in Depew The Transit Road portion of the route overlapped with NY 78 20 54 NY 18C was truncated to consist only of the Transit Road portion c 1935 26 54 and removed entirely c 1938 as part of US 20 s realignment through western New York 24 55 NY 18D was a spur route linking NY 18 to the Whirlpool Rapids Bridge north of downtown Niagara Falls It was assigned c 1932 15 20 and renumbered to NY 182 on January 1 1962 29 NY 18E was a short spur assigned in the early 1930s to a connector between then NY 18 now NY 18F and the original Queenston Lewiston Bridge in Lewiston 14 54 It was removed in the early 1960s when the original bridge to Queenston was replaced with the modern Lewiston Queenston Bridge a short distance upstream 56 57 The NY 18F designation has been used for two distinct highways The first NY 18F was assigned c 1934 to NY 18 s original routing between Cattaraugus and Little Valley 21 26 The designation was removed c 1938 22 23 The current NY 18F 9 80 miles or 15 77 kilometres is an alternate route of NY 18 in western Niagara County that serves the riverside villages of Lewiston and Youngstown 1 It was assigned in 1949 27 Major intersections editCountyLocationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotesNiagaraVillage of Lewiston0 000 00 nbsp NY 104 Canada BuffaloWestern terminus interchangeTown of Lewiston1 001 61 nbsp NY 104Porter6 9911 25 nbsp NY 93 Youngstown LockportHamlet of Towers Corners7 7512 47 nbsp nbsp NY 18F south Great Lakes Seaway TrailNorthern terminus of NY 18F8 5513 76 nbsp Niagara Scenic Parkway Fort Niagara Youngstown Niagara FallsNorthern terminus of Niagara Scenic ParkwayVillage of Wilson17 8528 73 nbsp nbsp NY 425 south Business DistrictNorthern terminus of NY 425Newfane23 7138 16 nbsp nbsp NY 78 southNorthern terminus of NY 78 hamlet of OlcottSomerset31 8551 26 nbsp nbsp NY 148 south BarkerNorthern terminus of NY 148Niagara Orleanscounty lineSomerset Yatestown line36 3958 56 nbsp nbsp NY 269 southNorthern terminus of NY 269OrleansYates40 2864 82 nbsp nbsp NY 63 south LyndonvilleNorthern terminus of NY 63Carlton47 2175 98 nbsp nbsp NY 279 southNorthern terminus of NY 27948 2177 59 nbsp nbsp Lakeside Beach Road Great Lakes Seaway Trail to Lake Ontario State Parkway Lakeside Beach State Park RochesterWestern terminus of Lake Ontario Parkway exit closed between December and March50 7981 74 nbsp nbsp NY 98 north Point BreezeHamlet of The Bridges northern terminus of NY 18 NY 98 overlap51 3382 61 nbsp nbsp NY 98 southHamlet of Baldwin Corner southern terminus of NY 18 NY 98 overlap51 6383 09 nbsp nbsp nbsp To NY 98 south via Roosevelt Highway NY 941M Eastern terminus of unsigned NY 941M to NY 98 south only signed westbound hamlet of Baldwin CornerKendall59 9996 54 nbsp NY 237Orleans Monroecounty lineKendall Hamlintown line62 20100 10 nbsp nbsp NY 272 northNorthern terminus of NY 18 NY 272 overlap63 18101 68 nbsp nbsp NY 272 southSouthern terminus of NY 18 NY 272 overlap hamlet of Kendall MillsMonroeHamlin67 12108 02 nbsp NY 19 hamlet of HamlinClarkson Hamlintown line70 15112 90 nbsp NY 260Hilton73 96119 03 nbsp nbsp NY 259 northNorthern terminus of NY 18 NY 259 overlapParma76 05122 39 nbsp nbsp NY 259 southHamlet of Parma Center southern terminus of NY 18 NY 259 overlapParma Greecetown line78 07125 64 nbsp nbsp NY 261 northNorthern terminus of NY 18 NY 261 overlap78 41126 19 nbsp nbsp NY 261 southSouthern terminus of NY 18 NY 261 overlapTown of Greece82 61132 95 nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 390 to Lake Ontario State ParkwayExit 26 NY 390 hamlet of Mount Read83 67134 65Latta Road NY 941A Western terminus of unsigned NY 941ARochester87 40140 66 nbsp NY 104Eastern terminus1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusSee also edit nbsp U S roads portalList of county routes in Cattaraugus County New YorkReferences edit a b c 2008 Traffic Data Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 pp 136 137 Retrieved January 12 2010 a b New York s Main Highways Designated by Numbers The New York Times December 21 1924 p XX9 a b c d e f g h i j New York State Map Map Cartography by Map Works I Love New York 2008 Orleans County Inventory Listing CSV New York State Department of Transportation March 2 2010 Retrieved May 20 2010 New York Map 1977 78 ed Cartography by General Drafting Exxon 1977 a b Braddock Heights Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved May 20 2010 New York State Department of Transportation January 2017 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes Bicycling Touring Routes Scenic Byways amp Commemorative Memorial Designations in New York State PDF Retrieved January 9 2017 Rochester West Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved May 20 2010 State of New York Department of Highways 1909 The Highway Law Albany New York J B Lyon Company p 60 Retrieved May 20 2010 New York State Department of Highways 1920 Report of the State Commissioner of Highways Albany New York J B Lyon Company pp 526 527 Retrieved May 20 2010 Official Map Showing State Highways and other important roads Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company State of New York Department of Public Works 1926 a b c Dickinson Leon A January 12 1930 New Signs for State Highways The New York Times p 136 New York in Soconyland Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1929 a b c d Road Map of New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1930 a b c d New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Kendall Refining Company 1931 New York with Pennsylvania Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texaco 1946 a b New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sunoco 1952 New York and Metropolitan New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sinclair Oil Corporation 1964 a b c Road Map amp Historical Guide New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Sun Oil Company 1935 a b c d Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1932 a b c Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1933 a b c Shell Road Map New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1937 a b c New York Road Map for 1938 Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1938 a b Thibodeau William A 1938 The ALA Green Book 1938 39 ed Automobile Legal Association New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1940 a b c d Road Map of New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1934 a b Highway Route Designations Change Jan 1 Evening Recorder Amsterdam NY Associated Press December 9 1948 p 19 New York with Special Maps of Putnam Rockland Westchester Counties and Finger Lakes Region Map 1955 56 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1954 a b Route Change Due in Area Niagara Falls Gazette December 21 1961 p 1 a b c New York and Metropolitan New York Map 1961 62 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Sunoco 1961 a b c New York with Sight Seeing Guide Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1962 State of New York Department of Transportation January 1 1970 Official Description of Touring Routes in New York State PDF Retrieved July 17 2009 a b New York Map 1969 70 ed Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1968 New York and New Jersey Tourgide Map Map 1972 ed Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Gulf Oil Company 1972 New York Map 1973 ed Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1973 New York State Department of Transportation October 2004 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes Scenic Byways amp Bicycle Routes in New York State PDF Retrieved July 17 2009 New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Humble Oil amp Refining Company 1971 Rochester East Digital Raster Quadrangle Map 1 24 000 New York State Department of Transportation 1997 Retrieved July 17 2009 Toth Marilou April 15 1968 Olcott Bridge Plan Recalls Succession Of Spans The Lockport Union Sun and Journal p 5 Retrieved October 9 2018 a b Toth Marilou May 26 1966 Bridge Harbor Updating Project Gaining Support In Olcott Area The Lockport Union Sun and Journal p 1 Retrieved October 9 2018 Toth Marilou February 10 1967 Capacity Crowd Approves New Olcott Bridge Plans The Lockport Union Sun and Journal p 9 Retrieved October 9 2018 Kielar Evelyn January 16 1968 Olcott Bridge Affects 67 Properties The Niagara Falls Gazette p 12 Retrieved October 10 2018 Relocated 1 75 Million Bridge At Olcott Would Carry Four Lanes Across Creek The Lockport Union Sun and Journal January 12 1968 p 1 Retrieved October 10 2018 2 5 Million Is Bid For Olcott Project The Courier Express June 21 1968 p 13 Retrieved October 10 2018 LaSpada S J October 1968 Work Under Way on 2 6 Million Bridge Road Project In Olcott The Niagara Falls Gazette Retrieved October 10 2018 Work On New Olcott Bridge Running Ahead Of Schedule The Lockport Union Sun and Journal April 26 1969 p 10 Retrieved October 10 2018 Olcott Bridge Construction Proceeding at Rapid Pace The Niagara Falls Gazette May 1969 Retrieved October 10 2018 Boone Jerry F October 3 1969 Tardy Delivery Of Steel Fails To Halt Olcott Bridge Progress The Lockport Union Sun and Journal p 11 Retrieved October 10 2018 New 2 7 Million Olcott Bridge Progressing Ahead Of Schedule The Lockport Union Sun and Journal July 30 1970 p 11 Retrieved October 10 2018 New Bridge At Olcott Open Monday The Niagara Falls Gazette November 7 1970 Retrieved October 10 2018 Creek Limits Are Extended The Niagara Falls Gazette February 12 1972 p 7 Retrieved October 10 2018 Pilings Of Old Bridge Structure Perils Boating At Olcott Harbor The Lockport Union Sun and Journal July 22 1972 p 9 Retrieved October 10 2018 Weekly Report On Road Conditions In This District PDF Lockport Union Sun and Journal June 10 1930 p 2 Retrieved December 16 2018 a b c Niagara Falls and Vicinity Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Shell Oil Company 1935 Archived from the original on March 27 2009 Retrieved December 3 2009 New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company 1937 Buffalo Niagara Falls New York Ontario Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Cities Service Company 1960 Archived from the original on August 26 2008 Retrieved December 5 2007 Niagara Frontier Map Cartography by Rolph Clark Stone White Rose 1963 Archived from the original on August 26 2008 Retrieved December 5 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to New York State Route 18 KML file edit help Template Attached KML New York State Route 18KML is from Wikidata New York State Route 18 at Alps Roads New York Routes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New York State Route 18 amp oldid 1145255884 Suffixed routes, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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