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U.S. Route 9W

U.S. Route 9W (US 9W) is a north–south United States Numbered Highway in the states of New Jersey and New York. It begins in Fort Lee, New Jersey, as Fletcher Avenue crosses the US 1/9, US 46, and Interstate 95 (I-95) approaches to the George Washington Bridge, and heads north up the west side of the Hudson River to US 9 in Albany, New York. As its "W" suffix indicates, US 9W is a westerly alternate route of US 9 between the two locations. US 9W directly serves three cities—Newburgh, Kingston, and Albany—and enters the vicinity of several others. As the route heads north, it connects to several highways of regional importance, including I-84, US 209, New York State Route 23 (NY 23), and US 20. Much of US 9W parallels the New York State Thruway and NY 32; additionally, the latter overlaps with US 9W in four different locations.

U.S. Route 9W

Map of eastern New York and North New Jersey with US 9W highlighted in red
Route information
Auxiliary route of US 9
Maintained by NJDOT, NYSDOT, and the cities of Newburgh, Kingston, and Albany
Length141.83 mi[1][2] (228.25 km)
Existed1927[3]–present
Major junctions
South end I-95 / US 1-9 / US 46 / Route 4 in Fort Lee, NJ
Major intersections
North end US 9 in Albany, NY
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesNew Jersey, New York
CountiesNJ: Bergen
NY: Rockland, Orange, Ulster, Greene, Albany
Highway system

Route description edit

For much of its length, US 9W is a two-lane surface road. However, some stretches in New Jersey and New York widen to four lanes, and much of the highway in Orange County is like an expressway even if not so designated.

New Jersey edit

 
View north along US 9W between the Esplanade and Hillside Avenue in Alpine, New Jersey

US 9W begins as a four-lane road. Heading north on Fletcher Avenue (from Kelby Street intersection, near the George Washington Bridge) in Fort Lee, US 9W occupies the right-of-way of the Palisades Interstate Parkway (PIP) to Lemoine Avenue, the northern terminus of Route 67. US 9W exits the right-of-way, turning north onto Lemoine Avenue, later Sylvan Avenue, in Englewood Cliffs, where it passes the headquarters of Ferrari of North America, Unilever, and CNBC. As the roadway enters Tenafly from Englewood Cliffs, it reduces to a two lane roadway from four lanes. It continues to parallel the PIP to its west as they progress northward along the west bank of the Hudson River until reaching the border with New York. Both roads run very near the top of the Palisades, occasionally offering views of New York City and the river.

Lemoine Avenue is heavy with commercial development in the Coytesville section of Fort Lee, but, as the road runs into Englewood Cliffs, it transitions to corporate office buildings. Into the affluent community of Alpine in the state's northeastern corner, it becomes more residential. Near Norwood, just south of the state line, US 9W crosses under the parkway and enters New York. Before the construction of the PIP, US 9W used to follow a route through the State Line Lookout at the New Jersey–New York border which is now accessible only from the parkway.

The entire route of US 9W in New Jersey is within Bergen County.

New York edit

Rockland County edit

Across the state line, US 9W continues in Palisades as Highland Avenue, a two-lane road through mostly residential suburban surroundings. It passes Columbia University's Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory and then Tallman Mountain State Park. Bending westward to Sparkill, it meets NY 340.

It returns to the riverside at Piermont, where it takes the name Broadway Avenue. Running due north, it enters Nyack and meets with the New York State Thruway (I-87 and I-287) just west of the Tappan Zee Bridge. It then runs along the thruway to the east terminus of NY 59 in downtown Nyack, where it becomes North Highland Avenue once again. North of Upper Nyack, it passes Rockland Lake through Valley Cottage and then Rockland Lake State Park.

Alongside the park, it crosses town lines again. NY 303 reaches its north end just after the park and, after a tight curve NY 304, reaches its northern terminus as well.

US 9W then returns to the riverside briefly, trending away from it into Haverstraw under the name Congers Avenue. The village is followed immediately by West Haverstraw, where US 202 comes in at an oblique angle and joins US 9W, creating the first concurrency along the route.

 
Hudson River Mothball Fleet

The combined highways head north from the Haverstraws as South, then North, Liberty Drive, passing Stony Point Battlefield. They return to the Hudson at Tomkins Cove, where the Hudson River National Defense Reserve Fleet was moored from 1947 to 1971. Between Tomkins Cove and Jones Point there are two large ships anchor surrounding a monument alongside the road that marks the spot which is just across from Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan.

 
US 9W climbing Dunderburg Mountain in northern Rockland County.

At Jones Point, the road curves and bends above the river as it works its way around Dunderberg Mountain, the southernmost peak of the Hudson Highlands and part of Bear Mountain State Park.

At Iona Island, it levels out again briefly and then US 9W/US 202 climbs to the heart of the state park at Bear Mountain Inn and Hessian Lake, where the Appalachian Trail crosses beneath the road in the only artificial tunnel along its entire route. The Orange County line is crossed just before Bear Mountain Circle.

Orange County edit

 
US 9W, as seen from the north end of the PIP at the Bear Mountain Circle in Fort Montgomery

The circle marks the northern terminus of the PIP and the junction with US 6. US 202 leaves US 9W to join US 6 here and cross the Bear Mountain Bridge. North of the circle, US 9W continues as a four-lane surface road, crossing Popolopen Creek and affording views of the similarly named Torne. It passes first the historic Fort Montgomery, then enters the small hamlet of the same name, distinguished by a post office, gas station, and some other small businesses.

A half-mile (0.80 km) further north, NY 218 (Storm King Highway), the former route of US 9W, forks off to the right, carrying traffic to Highland Falls and the U.S. Military Academy (USMA) at West Point. At this point, US 9W becomes a four-lane expressway as it starts to climb the highlands above the village and the academy. The first exit is NY 218, which joins US 9W for a mile (1.6 km) just north of the village. It leaves the highway at the northern terminus of NY 293 to run alongside Storm King Mountain.

 
The USMA viewed from US 9W just before passing over Crow's Nest

From here, US 9W continues its ascent, offering sweeping views over the river and highlands, with an overlook available to northbound drivers. The surrounding land is all woods, part of the vast USMA property. After passing Crow's Nest, Storm King and the rocky cliff faces of Butter Hill dominate the northward view. Another parking lot allows travelers to stop and sightsee, as well as hike the Stillman Trail up the two peaks.

After Storm King, the road begins a long descent into the town of Cornwall. Just outside the village of Cornwall-on-Hudson and the fields of New York Military Academy, NY 218 ends its loop. Shortly afterward, the division ends and grade intersections resume, although the road remains four lanes as it enters the town of New Windsor.

 
US 9W winding through the Hudson Highlands

It descends again where Breakneck Ridge and Bull Hill tower across the river. Traffic begins to slow down at the center of town, where NY 94 ends its journey across the county. After this traffic light, the road begins to narrow. Once across Quassaick Creek and into Newburgh, it is Robinson Avenue, a wide urban arterial with parking along the sides.

It ascends gently past Delano-Hitch Stadium and the associated park to the center of its passage across Newburgh, the intersection with Broadway. Here NY 17K has its eastern terminus, and NY 32, the other main surface route west of the Hudson, begins its first concurrency with US 9W.

Passing Broadway School, a former elementary school which is in the process of being converted into the City of Newburgh Court House, the two routes head into a more residential sector of the city, marked by Frederick Law Olmsted-designed Downing Park. The road's climb continues until the North campus of Newburgh Free Academy, where it starts to descend to the busy exit at I-84, visible ahead, just west of the Newburgh–Beacon Bridge. This junction, also including NY 52, is the city's northern limit.

 
Downing Park in the city of Newburgh

Immediately after it, NY 32 leaves to the northwest while US 9W continues northward. It passes Powelton Club, part of the affluent community of Balmville, the first of several within the town of Newburgh that US 9W will pass. Middle Hope follows, as the road becomes a two-lane route with a rural feel. Development continues along the road, but there are increasingly large unbroken fields or woodlots and, finally, in the northern reaches of the town, orchards. At Roseton, past the access road to the nearby powerplants, the highway reaches the county line just past the turnoff to the Gomez Mill House, the earliest surviving Jewish home in the U.S.

Ulster County edit

Traffic is slowed when it passes through the hamlet of Marlboro, but otherwise there is little change in US 9W until it widens to four lanes again just south of the Mid-Hudson Bridge approach overpass. At this point, US 44 and NY 55 join the highway from the east. The road becomes a busy commercial strip for the next mile to the concurrency's end, where NY 44 and NY 55 go down into Highland. The four lanes continue, however, for several more miles until well past the eastern terminus of NY 299, the road that carries traffic west toward the thruway and New Paltz.

About two miles (3.2 km) north of that intersection, the road returns to two lanes through West Park and Esopus, passing primarily through largely undeveloped, primarily wooded countryside. It becomes more built up at Port Ewen, just south of Kingston, which it enters by crossing Rondout Creek via the John T. Loughran Bridge and becoming Frank Koenig Boulevard and four lanes with limited access.

 
US 9W entering Kingston

It runs right through Kingston this way and meets NY 32 again at the city's northern boundary. Turning left, US 9W's second concurrency with NY 32 is only 500 feet (150 m) long as it almost immediately turns right onto East Chester Street. The road widens again, becoming a busy commercial strip. At the freeway interchange ahead for the Kingston–Rhinecliff Bridge, US 209 comes to its northern end and NY 199 its western.

In Lake Katrine, the road begins to narrow and traffic lightens. US 9W stays on a straight northward course, following alongside Esopus Creek but not crossing it, until it veers northeast to merge, once again, with NY 32.

This third concurrency finally brings the road over Esopus Creek and into the riverside village of Saugerties. Here, US 9W follows Partition Street and then Main Street when the routes part again, with NY 32 carrying NY 212 out of this junction. As Malden Avenue, the highway continues north alongside the river once again, passing through the hamlet of Malden-on-Hudson on its way up into Greene County.

Greene County and north edit

In Catskill, US 9W meets with NY 23A, then NY 385 at its southern terminus, and then, a mile (1.6 km) north, NY 23.

In Coxsackie, US 9W meets this time with the northern terminus of NY 385, as well as the eastern terminus of NY 81. In West Coxsackie, US 9W meets with the New York State Thruway (I-87). Further north, the route meets NY 144, and in the village of Ravena, it meets NY 143.

NY 396 meets US 9W in Selkirk. After briefly joining with NY 32 again, US 9W meets I-787 south of Albany. Immediately thereafter, NY 443 joins US 9W until Madison Avenue (US 20), where NY 443 ends. US 9W, however, continues on, meeting with NY 5 (junction not signed on NY 5) before ending at US 9 (Clinton Avenue).

History edit

Origins edit

In New York, much of what is now US 9W was designated as Route 3, an unsigned legislative route, by the New York State Legislature in 1908. The route extended from the New Jersey state line at Orangetown and went northward through the Hudson Valley to the city of Albany. Route 3 broke from modern US 9W in several locations, mostly in areas where the route has since been moved onto bypasses. In Clarkstown, Route 3 veered west to serve Congers via Lake and Old Haverstraw Roads. From Highland Falls to Cornwall-on-Hudson, Route 3 followed modern NY 218 around Storm King Mountain. Lastly, Route 3 utilized current NY 385 between Catskill and Coxsackie.[4][5] This route north of Route 3 was altered slightly on March 1, 1921, to bypass Congers on modern US 9W.[6] When the first set of posted routes in New York were assigned in 1924, all of legislative Route 3 south of Ravena was designated as part of NY 10. From Ravena to Albany, however, NY 10 followed a more easterly alignment along what is now NY 143, NY 144, and NY 32.[7][8][9] This route had previously been signed as part of the West Shore Route auto trail north of Newburgh.[10]

The New Jersey segment of modern US 9W was originally designated as part of Route 18N in 1923, a route that ran from Hoboken to the New York state line at Alpine via Fort Lee.[11] In the 1927 New Jersey state highway renumbering, Route 18N was truncated northward to Fort Lee. At the time, present-day County Route 501 (CR 501) north of Fort Lee was part of Route 1.[12] In 1929, Route 18N was supplanted by a realigned Route 1.[13] The Route 1 designation remained in place until the 1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering when it was removed to eliminate overlaps with several routes, including US 9W.[14][15]

Designation edit

 
US 9W southbound in Alpine, New Jersey

In the original 1925 plan for the U.S. Numbered Highway System, US 9 was designated along the west bank of the Hudson River from Fort Lee to Albany, utilizing Route 18N in New Jersey[16][17] and NY 10 in New York.[8][9] The alignment of US 9 in northern New Jersey and New York remained unchanged in the final system alignment approved on November 11, 1926.[18] However, when US 9 was commissioned in 1927, it was split into two branches between Bergen County, New Jersey, and Waterford, New York. The west branch began in Ridgefield and continued to the New York state line on modern Route 93 and CR 501, bypassing Fort Lee to the west. At the state line, the west branch of US 9 became US 9W and followed a short piece of what is now NY 340 to Sparkill.[19]

Past Sparkill, US 9W used what was originally planned as US 9 north to Waterford, utilizing modern NY 32 from Albany to Waterford.[3] The east branch of US 9 initially followed Route 5 east from Ridgefield to Edgewater, where it followed the Edgewater Ferry to the New York state line in the Hudson River.[20] The branch resumed at the northern New York City line as US 9E and continued to Waterford on what is now US 9 and US 4 along the eastern side of the river. At Waterford, the two branches converged and continued north toward the Canada–United States border as a unified US 9.[3]

Early changes edit

The two branches of US 9 in New Jersey were altered several times over the next decade. At some point between 1927 and 1929, the west branch of US 9 was reconfigured in Bergen County to enter Fort Lee from the south on Palisade Avenue (current Route 67) and proceed north from Fort Lee to New York on Route 18N (later Route 1). The portion of US 9W in New York south of Sparkill was altered accordingly to meet the realigned US 9.[19][20] In the early 1930s, the east branch of US 9 was shifted southward to reach New York via modern Route 139 and the Holland Tunnel while the west branch of the route was realigned to follow what is now US 1/9 between the Tonnele Circle and Fort Lee.[21][22] US 9W was extended southward into New Jersey c. 1932, replacing the west branch of US 9.[22][23] US 9 was rerouted c. 1934 to follow US 9W and the George Washington Bridge to New York; as a result, US 9W was cut back to its current southern terminus in Fort Lee.[24][25]

In the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, US 9W was truncated southward to end in Albany while US 9E was redesignated as just US 9 and reconfigured to bypass Waterford to the west in favor of a direct alignment between Albany and Round Lake.[26][27] At the same time, US 9W was realigned through New Baltimore and Coeymans to use modern NY 144 instead. The portion of what is now US 9W from New Baltimore to Albany was originally designated as NY 144 as part of the 1930 renumbering[20][21] while the segment from Catskill to Coxsackie was assigned NY 385 c. 1932.[22][23] The alignments of US 9W and NY 385 were swapped by the following year[24] while the routings of US 9W and NY 144 were flipped in April 1935.[28]

Bypasses edit

In the early 1930s, plans were made by the state of New York to construct a new highway between the Bear Mountain Bridge and Cornwall-on-Hudson that would bypass both Cornwall-on-Hudson and Highland Falls and bypass the narrow Storm King Highway, US 9W's original routing between the two. On April 8, 1934, three people were killed by a rockslide on the Storm King Highway, expediting plans for the new highway, known as the Storm King Cutoff.[29] The southernmost two miles (3.2 km) of the highway—from the bridge to just north of Fort Montgomery—utilized the existing right-of-way of US 9W,[30] which was widened from two to four lanes[29] and straightened through the construction of rock cuts. Construction on this segment was completed in 1937.[30]

The portion of the bypass from Fort Montgomery to Cornwall-on-Hudson, with the exception of a one-mile (1.6 km) stretch northwest of Highland Falls, was constructed on a new alignment. It was built with four lanes and constructed along the sides of Storm King Mountain and other, smaller hills in the area. The high elevation of the roadway gave rise to a bevy of scenic, panoramic views that stretched for several miles into the distance; as a result, a fifth lane was added in some areas to allow motorists to stop and view the scenery. Like the section south of Fort Montgomery, the one-mile (1.6 km) stretch that utilized the original US 9W was widened to four lanes as well. Several interchanges were built along the route, including with NY 293 and NY 307.[29] The cutoff was opened to traffic from Fort Montgomery to NY 293 sometime in 1939 or 1940 and to Angola Road (CR 9) on September 26, 1940.[29][31] The last section, from Angola Road north to Blooming Grove Turnpike north of Cornwall-on-Hudson, was opened to traffic on May 31, 1941. US 9W was realigned to follow the cutoff[32] while its old route via the Storm King Highway became NY 218.[33]

Bypasses have also been proposed or constructed in other locations. In Kingston, US 9W was originally routed on Wurts Street, McEntee Street, Broadway, and East Chester Street.[34] An easterly bypass of the city between Wurts Street and NY 32 was constructed in the late 1970s and completed as a realignment of US 9W by 1981.[35][36] The portion of US 9W's former alignment south of Abeel Street in Kingston became NY 984D, an unsigned reference route.[37] In Albany, the north end of US 9W and part of US 9 would have been rerouted onto a proposed limited-access highway called the Mid-Crosstown Arterial.[citation needed] The project was eventually canceled.[citation needed]

Major intersections edit

StateCountyLocationmi[1][2]kmDestinationsNotes
New JerseyBergenFort Lee0.000.00    
 
 
 
 
 
I-95 / US 1-9 / US 46 to N.J. Turnpike south / I-80 west – George Washington Bridge, New York City
Exits 72-73 on I-95
0.170.27 
 
Route 4 west
0.651.05 
 
 
 
Route 67 south / Palisades Parkway north
Access to Palisades Pkwy. via Route 445S; northern terminus of Route 67
Englewood Cliffs2.193.52 
 
  CR 505 west (Palisades Avenue) / Palisades Parkway – Englewood
Exit 1 on Palisades Parkway
Alpine7.1911.57 
 
CR 502 west (Closter Dock Road) – Closter, Westwood
Eastern terminus of CR 502
7.7712.50  Palisades ParkwayExit 2 on Palisades Parkway; access via Alpine Approach Road/Henry Hudson Drive
9.7515.69  Palisades ParkwayExit 3 on Palisades Parkway
10.46–
10.84
16.83–
17.45
  Palisades ParkwayExit 4 on Palisades Parkway
 11.87
0.00
19.10
0.00
New JerseyNew York state line
New YorkRocklandOrangetown2.634.23 
 
To NY 340 – Sparkill
Access via NY 981H/NY 981J
South Nyack5.999.64    I-87 / I-287 / New York Thruway – Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge, New York City, AlbanyExit 10 (I-87/I-287/Thruway)
Nyack7.1111.44    
 
I-87 / I-287 / New York Thruway / NY 59 west – Governor Mario M. Cuomo Bridge, New York City, Albany
Exit 11 (I-87/I-287/Thruway); eastern terminus of NY 59
Clarkstown12.8120.62 
 
NY 303 south – West Nyack, Congers
Northern terminus of NY 303
13.4221.60 
 
NY 304 south – New City
Northern terminus of NY 304
Village of Haverstraw15.8725.54Westside Avenue (NY 981F north)Southern terminus of unsigned NY 981F
16.2726.18 
 
US 202 west – Suffern
Southern terminus of concurrency with US 202
Stony Point 
 
 
To Seven Lakes Drive west – Bear Mountain State Park
Access via South Entrance Road
 
 
Seven Lakes Drive west – Bear Mountain State Park
Eastern terminus of Seven Lakes Drive
OrangeHighlands26.6742.92  
 
 
 
US 6 / US 202 east (Bear Mountain Bridge) / Palisades Parkway south – Peekskill, Cold Spring, Central Valley, New Jersey
Northern terminus of US 202 concurrency and Palisades Parkway; Bear Mountain Circle
28.4645.80Old State Road (NY 980U north)Southern terminus of unsigned NY 980U
Highland Falls29.3647.25 
 
NY 218 north – West Point, Highland Falls
Interchange; southern terminus of NY 218
Highlands31.3150.39 
 
NY 218 south – West Point, Highland Falls
Interchange; southern terminus of concurrency with NY 218
32.0751.61 
 
 
 
NY 218 north / NY 293 south – Central Valley
Interchange; northern terminus of NY 293 and of concurrency with NY 218
Cornwall37.6260.54  CR 9 (Angola Road)Interchange
38.0661.25  
 
CR 107 (Quaker Avenue) to NY 32 – Cornwall, Storm King Art Center
Interchange; formerly NY 307; hamlet of Firthcliffe
38.6662.22  CR 32 (Willow Avenue)Interchange; hamlet of Firthcliffe
39.5163.59 
 
NY 218 south – Cornwall
Interchange; northern terminus of NY 218
Town of New WindsorRiver RoadInterchange; hamlet of New Windsor
42.3068.08 
 
NY 94 south – Vails Gate
Northern terminus of NY 94
City of Newburgh43.2269.56 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NY 17K west (Broadway) / NY 32 south to I-87 / New York Thruway
Eastern terminus of NY 17K; southern terminus of concurrency with NY 32
South Street (NY 980P)Former routing of NY 52
Town of Newburgh44.52–
44.58
71.65–
71.74
   
 
 
 
 
 
  I-84 / NY 52 (Newburgh–Beacon Bridge) / NY 32 north to I-87 / New York Thruway – Fishkill, Danbury, New Paltz, Port Jervis, Stewart Airport
Exit 39 on I-84 / NY 52; northern terminus of concurrency with NY 32; hamlet of Balmville
UlsterLloyd58.4794.10 
 
 
 
 
 
US 44 east / NY 55 east to US 9 – Mid-Hudson Bridge, Poughkeepsie
Interchange; southern terminus of concurrency with US 44 / NY 55
59.0395.00 
 
 
 
US 44 west / NY 55 west
Northern terminus of concurrency with US 44 / NY 55; hamlet of Highland
60.9198.03 
 
 
 
 
 
NY 299 west to I-87 / New York Thruway – New Paltz
Eastern terminus of NY 299
Esopus72.92117.35Old Route 9W ( NY 984D north)Southern terminus of unsigned NY 984D; former routing of US 9W; hamlet of Port Ewen
City of Kingston74.12119.28Delaware AvenueInterchange
Ulster75.37121.30 
 
NY 32 north – Saugerties, Kingston–Rhinecliff Bridge
Southern terminus of concurrency with NY 32
City of Kingston75.65121.75 
 
NY 32 south – Tillson
Northern terminus of concurrency with NY 32
Ulster76.96123.86Ulster Avenue (NY 981M south)Northern terminus of unsigned NY 981M
78.04125.59 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
US 209 south / NY 199 east to I-87 / New York Thruway / US 9 / NY 9G – Rhinecliff Bridge, Ellenville
Interchange; northern terminus of US 209; western terminus of NY 199
Town of Saugerties83.70134.70 
 
NY 32 south – Glasco
Southern terminus of concurrency with NY 32
Village of Saugerties85.92138.27 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NY 32 north / NY 212 west to I-87 / New York Thruway
Northern terminus of concurrency with NY 32; eastern terminus of NY 212
GreeneVillage of Catskill96.33155.03 
 
NY 23A west – Tannersville, Hunter
Eastern terminus of NY 23A
96.88155.91 
 
NY 385 north – Downtown Catskill
Southern terminus of NY 385
Town of Catskill98.13157.92  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NY 23 to I-87 / New York Thruway / US 9 / NY 9G – Rip Van Winkle Bridge, Cairo, Hudson
Interchange
Town of Coxsackie107.54173.07 
 
 
 
NY 81 west / NY 385 south – Greenville, Coxsackie
Eastern terminus of NY 81; northern terminus of NY 385
107.74173.39Mansion Street Extension ( NY 910U south)Former routing of US 9W; northern terminus of unsigned NY 910U
Town of New Baltimore109.73176.59   I-87 / New York ThruwayExit 21B on I-87 / Thruway
112.02180.28 
 
NY 144 north – New Baltimore
Southern terminus of NY 144
AlbanyRavena115.03185.12  NY 143 – Westerlo, Ravena
Bethlehem120.74194.31  
 
 
 
NY 396 to I-87 / New York Thruway – South Bethlehem, Selkirk
Hamlet of Beckers Corners
125.91202.63 
 
NY 32 south – Delmar
Interchange; southern terminus of concurrency with NY 32
126.30203.26 
 
NY 32 north
Northern terminus of concurrency with NY 32
Albany127.10204.55   
 
I-87 / New York Thruway / I-787 north – Rensselaer, Troy
Southern terminus and exit 1 on I-787; exit 23 on I-87 / Thruway
127.96205.93 
 
NY 443 west (Delaware Avenue)
Southern terminus of concurrency with NY 443
129.31208.10  US 20 (Madison Avenue)
 
 
NY 443 ends
Eastern terminus of NY 443
129.68208.70  NY 5 (Washington Avenue)
129.96209.15  US 9 (Clinton Avenue)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "US 9W Straight Line Diagram" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. May 2009. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "2008 Traffic Volume Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. pp. 30–32. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  3. ^ a b c Automobile Blue Book. Vol. 1 (1927 ed.). Chicago: Automobile Blue Book, Inc. 1927. This edition shows U.S. Routes as they were first officially signed in 1927.
  4. ^ State of New York Department of Highways (1909). The Highway Law. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company. p. 54. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  5. ^ New York State Department of Highways (1920). Report of the State Commissioner of Highways. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 499–500. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  6. ^ New York State Legislature (1921). "Tables of Laws and Codes Amended or Repealed". Laws of the State of New York passed at the One Hundred and Forty-Fourth Session of the Legislature. Albany, NY: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 42, 45–46. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  7. ^ "New York's Main Highways Designated by Numbers". The New York Times. December 21, 1924. p. XX9.
  8. ^ a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas (western New York) (Map). Rand McNally and Company. 1926. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  9. ^ a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas (eastern New York) (Map). Rand McNally and Company. 1926. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  10. ^ "Rand McNally official 1920 auto trails map, New York City and vicinity". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  11. ^ "Route No. 18-N From Hoboken to New York State line by way of Weehawken, West Hoboken, town of Union, North Bergen, Fairview, Ridgefield, Palisade Park, Fort Lee, Englewood-Cliffs, Tenafly and Alpine". New Jersey State Legislations. New Jersey State Legislature. 1923.
  12. ^ State of New Jersey, Laws of 1927, Chapter 319.
  13. ^ ROUTE NO. 1. Alpine to Bayonne. Beginning at the New York state line on state highway route heretofore designated as Route No. 18--north in Alpine and terminating in Bayonne, by way of Alpine, Tenafly, Fort Lee and Ridgefield, in Bergen county, North Bergen, Jersey City and Bayonne, in Hudson county. L. 1929, c. 126, p. 215, s. 1.
  14. ^ "1953 renumbering". New Jersey Department of Highways. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved July 31, 2009.
  15. ^ . The New York Times. December 16, 1952. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved July 20, 2009.
  16. ^ Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways. Bureau of Public Roads. October 30, 1925. Retrieved February 24, 2018.
  17. ^ New York and Vicinity (Map). Rand McNally and Company. 1926. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  18. ^ Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  19. ^ a b 1927 Tydol Trails Map (north New Jersey) (Map). Tydol Oil Company. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  20. ^ a b c New York in Soconyland (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company of New York. 1929.
  21. ^ a b Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Standard Oil Company of New York. 1930.
  22. ^ a b c Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Texas Oil Company. 1932.
  23. ^ a b New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company. Kendall Refining Company. 1931.
  24. ^ a b Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. Texas Oil Company. 1933.
  25. ^ "Mark Ways in the City". The New York Times. December 16, 1934. p. XX12.
  26. ^ Automobile Legal Association (ALA) Automobile Green Book, 1930–31 and 1931–32 editions, (Scarborough Motor Guide Co., Boston, 1930 and 1931). The 1930–31 edition shows New York state routes prior to the 1930 renumbering
  27. ^ Dickinson, Leon A. (January 12, 1930). "New Signs for State Highways". The New York Times. p. 136.
  28. ^ "Route Changes in State Listed". New York Post. March 30, 1935. p. 18. Retrieved June 13, 2017.
  29. ^ a b c d Mathieu, George M. (August 6, 1939). "Storm King Cut-Off Pushed". The New York Times. pp. XX1, XX10.
  30. ^ a b "Route U.S. 9W Improved". The New York Times. November 21, 1937. p. 196.
  31. ^ Mathieu, George M. (September 22, 1940). "A New Route North". The New York Times. p. XX1.
  32. ^ Mathieu, George M. (May 25, 1941). "A Cut-Off With Views". The New York Times. p. XX2.
  33. ^ New York with Pictorial Guide (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Esso. 1942.
  34. ^ Official Highway Map of New York State (Map) (1947–48 ed.). Cartography by General Drafting. State of New York Department of Public Works.
  35. ^ New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. Exxon. 1979.
  36. ^ I Love New York Tourism Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. State of New York. 1981.
  37. ^ New York State Department of Transportation (January 2012). Official Description of Highway Touring Routes, Bicycling Touring Routes, Scenic Byways, & Commemorative/Memorial Designations in New York State (PDF). Retrieved February 1, 2012.

External links edit

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  • U.S. Route 9W at Alps' Roads • New York Routes
  • (PDF)
  • New Jersey Roads: US 9W
  • US 9W @ NYS Thruway Exit 10 (Empire State Roads.com)
  • US 9W @ NYS Thruway Exit 11 (Empire State Roads.com)
  • Police Scanner Frequencies for Route 9W
  • Speed Limits for Route 9W in New Jersey

route, north, south, united, states, numbered, highway, states, jersey, york, begins, fort, jersey, fletcher, avenue, crosses, interstate, approaches, george, washington, bridge, heads, north, west, side, hudson, river, albany, york, suffix, indicates, westerl. U S Route 9W US 9W is a north south United States Numbered Highway in the states of New Jersey and New York It begins in Fort Lee New Jersey as Fletcher Avenue crosses the US 1 9 US 46 and Interstate 95 I 95 approaches to the George Washington Bridge and heads north up the west side of the Hudson River to US 9 in Albany New York As its W suffix indicates US 9W is a westerly alternate route of US 9 between the two locations US 9W directly serves three cities Newburgh Kingston and Albany and enters the vicinity of several others As the route heads north it connects to several highways of regional importance including I 84 US 209 New York State Route 23 NY 23 and US 20 Much of US 9W parallels the New York State Thruway and NY 32 additionally the latter overlaps with US 9W in four different locations U S Route 9WMap of eastern New York and North New Jersey with US 9W highlighted in redRoute informationAuxiliary route of US 9Maintained by NJDOT NYSDOT and the cities of Newburgh Kingston and AlbanyLength141 83 mi 1 2 228 25 km Existed1927 3 presentMajor junctionsSouth endI 95 US 1 9 US 46 Route 4 in Fort Lee NJMajor intersectionsRoute 67 Palisades Parkway in Fort Lee NJ Palisades Parkway in Alpine NJ I 87 I 287 New York Thruway NY 59 in Nyack NY US 202 in Haverstraw NY US 6 US 202 Palisades Parkway in Bear Mountain State Park NY I 84 NY 52 in Newburgh NY US 44 NY 55 in Highland NY US 209 NY 199 in Kingston NY I 87 New York Thruway in New Baltimore NY I 787 in Albany NY US 20 in Albany NYNorth endUS 9 in Albany NYLocationCountryUnited StatesStatesNew Jersey New YorkCountiesNJ BergenNY Rockland Orange Ulster Greene AlbanyHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway System List Special Divided Route 9NJ Route 10 NY 9RNY NY 9X Contents 1 Route description 1 1 New Jersey 1 2 New York 1 2 1 Rockland County 1 2 2 Orange County 1 2 3 Ulster County 1 2 4 Greene County and north 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Designation 2 3 Early changes 2 4 Bypasses 3 Major intersections 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute description editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message For much of its length US 9W is a two lane surface road However some stretches in New Jersey and New York widen to four lanes and much of the highway in Orange County is like an expressway even if not so designated New Jersey edit nbsp View north along US 9W between the Esplanade and Hillside Avenue in Alpine New Jersey US 9W begins as a four lane road Heading north on Fletcher Avenue from Kelby Street intersection near the George Washington Bridge in Fort Lee US 9W occupies the right of way of the Palisades Interstate Parkway PIP to Lemoine Avenue the northern terminus of Route 67 US 9W exits the right of way turning north onto Lemoine Avenue later Sylvan Avenue in Englewood Cliffs where it passes the headquarters of Ferrari of North America Unilever and CNBC As the roadway enters Tenafly from Englewood Cliffs it reduces to a two lane roadway from four lanes It continues to parallel the PIP to its west as they progress northward along the west bank of the Hudson River until reaching the border with New York Both roads run very near the top of the Palisades occasionally offering views of New York City and the river Lemoine Avenue is heavy with commercial development in the Coytesville section of Fort Lee but as the road runs into Englewood Cliffs it transitions to corporate office buildings Into the affluent community of Alpine in the state s northeastern corner it becomes more residential Near Norwood just south of the state line US 9W crosses under the parkway and enters New York Before the construction of the PIP US 9W used to follow a route through the State Line Lookout at the New Jersey New York border which is now accessible only from the parkway The entire route of US 9W in New Jersey is within Bergen County New York edit Rockland County edit Across the state line US 9W continues in Palisades as Highland Avenue a two lane road through mostly residential suburban surroundings It passes Columbia University s Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory and then Tallman Mountain State Park Bending westward to Sparkill it meets NY 340 It returns to the riverside at Piermont where it takes the name Broadway Avenue Running due north it enters Nyack and meets with the New York State Thruway I 87 and I 287 just west of the Tappan Zee Bridge It then runs along the thruway to the east terminus of NY 59 in downtown Nyack where it becomes North Highland Avenue once again North of Upper Nyack it passes Rockland Lake through Valley Cottage and then Rockland Lake State Park Alongside the park it crosses town lines again NY 303 reaches its north end just after the park and after a tight curve NY 304 reaches its northern terminus as well US 9W then returns to the riverside briefly trending away from it into Haverstraw under the name Congers Avenue The village is followed immediately by West Haverstraw where US 202 comes in at an oblique angle and joins US 9W creating the first concurrency along the route nbsp Hudson River Mothball Fleet The combined highways head north from the Haverstraws as South then North Liberty Drive passing Stony Point Battlefield They return to the Hudson at Tomkins Cove where the Hudson River National Defense Reserve Fleet was moored from 1947 to 1971 Between Tomkins Cove and Jones Point there are two large ships anchor surrounding a monument alongside the road that marks the spot which is just across from Indian Point Energy Center in Buchanan nbsp US 9W climbing Dunderburg Mountain in northern Rockland County At Jones Point the road curves and bends above the river as it works its way around Dunderberg Mountain the southernmost peak of the Hudson Highlands and part of Bear Mountain State Park At Iona Island it levels out again briefly and then US 9W US 202 climbs to the heart of the state park at Bear Mountain Inn and Hessian Lake where the Appalachian Trail crosses beneath the road in the only artificial tunnel along its entire route The Orange County line is crossed just before Bear Mountain Circle Orange County edit nbsp US 9W as seen from the north end of the PIP at the Bear Mountain Circle in Fort Montgomery The circle marks the northern terminus of the PIP and the junction with US 6 US 202 leaves US 9W to join US 6 here and cross the Bear Mountain Bridge North of the circle US 9W continues as a four lane surface road crossing Popolopen Creek and affording views of the similarly named Torne It passes first the historic Fort Montgomery then enters the small hamlet of the same name distinguished by a post office gas station and some other small businesses A half mile 0 80 km further north NY 218 Storm King Highway the former route of US 9W forks off to the right carrying traffic to Highland Falls and the U S Military Academy USMA at West Point At this point US 9W becomes a four lane expressway as it starts to climb the highlands above the village and the academy The first exit is NY 218 which joins US 9W for a mile 1 6 km just north of the village It leaves the highway at the northern terminus of NY 293 to run alongside Storm King Mountain nbsp The USMA viewed from US 9W just before passing over Crow s Nest From here US 9W continues its ascent offering sweeping views over the river and highlands with an overlook available to northbound drivers The surrounding land is all woods part of the vast USMA property After passing Crow s Nest Storm King and the rocky cliff faces of Butter Hill dominate the northward view Another parking lot allows travelers to stop and sightsee as well as hike the Stillman Trail up the two peaks After Storm King the road begins a long descent into the town of Cornwall Just outside the village of Cornwall on Hudson and the fields of New York Military Academy NY 218 ends its loop Shortly afterward the division ends and grade intersections resume although the road remains four lanes as it enters the town of New Windsor nbsp US 9W winding through the Hudson Highlands It descends again where Breakneck Ridge and Bull Hill tower across the river Traffic begins to slow down at the center of town where NY 94 ends its journey across the county After this traffic light the road begins to narrow Once across Quassaick Creek and into Newburgh it is Robinson Avenue a wide urban arterial with parking along the sides It ascends gently past Delano Hitch Stadium and the associated park to the center of its passage across Newburgh the intersection with Broadway Here NY 17K has its eastern terminus and NY 32 the other main surface route west of the Hudson begins its first concurrency with US 9W Passing Broadway School a former elementary school which is in the process of being converted into the City of Newburgh Court House the two routes head into a more residential sector of the city marked by Frederick Law Olmsted designed Downing Park The road s climb continues until the North campus of Newburgh Free Academy where it starts to descend to the busy exit at I 84 visible ahead just west of the Newburgh Beacon Bridge This junction also including NY 52 is the city s northern limit nbsp Downing Park in the city of Newburgh Immediately after it NY 32 leaves to the northwest while US 9W continues northward It passes Powelton Club part of the affluent community of Balmville the first of several within the town of Newburgh that US 9W will pass Middle Hope follows as the road becomes a two lane route with a rural feel Development continues along the road but there are increasingly large unbroken fields or woodlots and finally in the northern reaches of the town orchards At Roseton past the access road to the nearby powerplants the highway reaches the county line just past the turnoff to the Gomez Mill House the earliest surviving Jewish home in the U S Ulster County edit Traffic is slowed when it passes through the hamlet of Marlboro but otherwise there is little change in US 9W until it widens to four lanes again just south of the Mid Hudson Bridge approach overpass At this point US 44 and NY 55 join the highway from the east The road becomes a busy commercial strip for the next mile to the concurrency s end where NY 44 and NY 55 go down into Highland The four lanes continue however for several more miles until well past the eastern terminus of NY 299 the road that carries traffic west toward the thruway and New Paltz About two miles 3 2 km north of that intersection the road returns to two lanes through West Park and Esopus passing primarily through largely undeveloped primarily wooded countryside It becomes more built up at Port Ewen just south of Kingston which it enters by crossing Rondout Creek via the John T Loughran Bridge and becoming Frank Koenig Boulevard and four lanes with limited access nbsp US 9W entering Kingston It runs right through Kingston this way and meets NY 32 again at the city s northern boundary Turning left US 9W s second concurrency with NY 32 is only 500 feet 150 m long as it almost immediately turns right onto East Chester Street The road widens again becoming a busy commercial strip At the freeway interchange ahead for the Kingston Rhinecliff Bridge US 209 comes to its northern end and NY 199 its western In Lake Katrine the road begins to narrow and traffic lightens US 9W stays on a straight northward course following alongside Esopus Creek but not crossing it until it veers northeast to merge once again with NY 32 This third concurrency finally brings the road over Esopus Creek and into the riverside village of Saugerties Here US 9W follows Partition Street and then Main Street when the routes part again with NY 32 carrying NY 212 out of this junction As Malden Avenue the highway continues north alongside the river once again passing through the hamlet of Malden on Hudson on its way up into Greene County Greene County and north edit In Catskill US 9W meets with NY 23A then NY 385 at its southern terminus and then a mile 1 6 km north NY 23 In Coxsackie US 9W meets this time with the northern terminus of NY 385 as well as the eastern terminus of NY 81 In West Coxsackie US 9W meets with the New York State Thruway I 87 Further north the route meets NY 144 and in the village of Ravena it meets NY 143 NY 396 meets US 9W in Selkirk After briefly joining with NY 32 again US 9W meets I 787 south of Albany Immediately thereafter NY 443 joins US 9W until Madison Avenue US 20 where NY 443 ends US 9W however continues on meeting with NY 5 junction not signed on NY 5 before ending at US 9 Clinton Avenue History editOrigins edit In New York much of what is now US 9W was designated as Route 3 an unsigned legislative route by the New York State Legislature in 1908 The route extended from the New Jersey state line at Orangetown and went northward through the Hudson Valley to the city of Albany Route 3 broke from modern US 9W in several locations mostly in areas where the route has since been moved onto bypasses In Clarkstown Route 3 veered west to serve Congers via Lake and Old Haverstraw Roads From Highland Falls to Cornwall on Hudson Route 3 followed modern NY 218 around Storm King Mountain Lastly Route 3 utilized current NY 385 between Catskill and Coxsackie 4 5 This route north of Route 3 was altered slightly on March 1 1921 to bypass Congers on modern US 9W 6 When the first set of posted routes in New York were assigned in 1924 all of legislative Route 3 south of Ravena was designated as part of NY 10 From Ravena to Albany however NY 10 followed a more easterly alignment along what is now NY 143 NY 144 and NY 32 7 8 9 This route had previously been signed as part of the West Shore Route auto trail north of Newburgh 10 The New Jersey segment of modern US 9W was originally designated as part of Route 18N in 1923 a route that ran from Hoboken to the New York state line at Alpine via Fort Lee 11 In the 1927 New Jersey state highway renumbering Route 18N was truncated northward to Fort Lee At the time present day County Route 501 CR 501 north of Fort Lee was part of Route 1 12 In 1929 Route 18N was supplanted by a realigned Route 1 13 The Route 1 designation remained in place until the 1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering when it was removed to eliminate overlaps with several routes including US 9W 14 15 Designation edit nbsp US 9W southbound in Alpine New Jersey In the original 1925 plan for the U S Numbered Highway System US 9 was designated along the west bank of the Hudson River from Fort Lee to Albany utilizing Route 18N in New Jersey 16 17 and NY 10 in New York 8 9 The alignment of US 9 in northern New Jersey and New York remained unchanged in the final system alignment approved on November 11 1926 18 However when US 9 was commissioned in 1927 it was split into two branches between Bergen County New Jersey and Waterford New York The west branch began in Ridgefield and continued to the New York state line on modern Route 93 and CR 501 bypassing Fort Lee to the west At the state line the west branch of US 9 became US 9W and followed a short piece of what is now NY 340 to Sparkill 19 Past Sparkill US 9W used what was originally planned as US 9 north to Waterford utilizing modern NY 32 from Albany to Waterford 3 The east branch of US 9 initially followed Route 5 east from Ridgefield to Edgewater where it followed the Edgewater Ferry to the New York state line in the Hudson River 20 The branch resumed at the northern New York City line as US 9E and continued to Waterford on what is now US 9 and US 4 along the eastern side of the river At Waterford the two branches converged and continued north toward the Canada United States border as a unified US 9 3 Early changes edit The two branches of US 9 in New Jersey were altered several times over the next decade At some point between 1927 and 1929 the west branch of US 9 was reconfigured in Bergen County to enter Fort Lee from the south on Palisade Avenue current Route 67 and proceed north from Fort Lee to New York on Route 18N later Route 1 The portion of US 9W in New York south of Sparkill was altered accordingly to meet the realigned US 9 19 20 In the early 1930s the east branch of US 9 was shifted southward to reach New York via modern Route 139 and the Holland Tunnel while the west branch of the route was realigned to follow what is now US 1 9 between the Tonnele Circle and Fort Lee 21 22 US 9W was extended southward into New Jersey c 1932 replacing the west branch of US 9 22 23 US 9 was rerouted c 1934 to follow US 9W and the George Washington Bridge to New York as a result US 9W was cut back to its current southern terminus in Fort Lee 24 25 In the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York US 9W was truncated southward to end in Albany while US 9E was redesignated as just US 9 and reconfigured to bypass Waterford to the west in favor of a direct alignment between Albany and Round Lake 26 27 At the same time US 9W was realigned through New Baltimore and Coeymans to use modern NY 144 instead The portion of what is now US 9W from New Baltimore to Albany was originally designated as NY 144 as part of the 1930 renumbering 20 21 while the segment from Catskill to Coxsackie was assigned NY 385 c 1932 22 23 The alignments of US 9W and NY 385 were swapped by the following year 24 while the routings of US 9W and NY 144 were flipped in April 1935 28 Bypasses edit In the early 1930s plans were made by the state of New York to construct a new highway between the Bear Mountain Bridge and Cornwall on Hudson that would bypass both Cornwall on Hudson and Highland Falls and bypass the narrow Storm King Highway US 9W s original routing between the two On April 8 1934 three people were killed by a rockslide on the Storm King Highway expediting plans for the new highway known as the Storm King Cutoff 29 The southernmost two miles 3 2 km of the highway from the bridge to just north of Fort Montgomery utilized the existing right of way of US 9W 30 which was widened from two to four lanes 29 and straightened through the construction of rock cuts Construction on this segment was completed in 1937 30 The portion of the bypass from Fort Montgomery to Cornwall on Hudson with the exception of a one mile 1 6 km stretch northwest of Highland Falls was constructed on a new alignment It was built with four lanes and constructed along the sides of Storm King Mountain and other smaller hills in the area The high elevation of the roadway gave rise to a bevy of scenic panoramic views that stretched for several miles into the distance as a result a fifth lane was added in some areas to allow motorists to stop and view the scenery Like the section south of Fort Montgomery the one mile 1 6 km stretch that utilized the original US 9W was widened to four lanes as well Several interchanges were built along the route including with NY 293 and NY 307 29 The cutoff was opened to traffic from Fort Montgomery to NY 293 sometime in 1939 or 1940 and to Angola Road CR 9 on September 26 1940 29 31 The last section from Angola Road north to Blooming Grove Turnpike north of Cornwall on Hudson was opened to traffic on May 31 1941 US 9W was realigned to follow the cutoff 32 while its old route via the Storm King Highway became NY 218 33 Bypasses have also been proposed or constructed in other locations In Kingston US 9W was originally routed on Wurts Street McEntee Street Broadway and East Chester Street 34 An easterly bypass of the city between Wurts Street and NY 32 was constructed in the late 1970s and completed as a realignment of US 9W by 1981 35 36 The portion of US 9W s former alignment south of Abeel Street in Kingston became NY 984D an unsigned reference route 37 In Albany the north end of US 9W and part of US 9 would have been rerouted onto a proposed limited access highway called the Mid Crosstown Arterial citation needed The project was eventually canceled citation needed Major intersections editStateCountyLocationmi 1 2 kmDestinationsNotes New JerseyBergenFort Lee0 000 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 95 US 1 9 US 46 to N J Turnpike south I 80 west George Washington Bridge New York CityExits 72 73 on I 95 0 170 27 nbsp nbsp Route 4 west 0 651 05 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 67 south Palisades Parkway northAccess to Palisades Pkwy via Route 445S northern terminus of Route 67 Englewood Cliffs2 193 52 nbsp nbsp nbsp CR 505 west Palisades Avenue Palisades Parkway EnglewoodExit 1 on Palisades Parkway Alpine7 1911 57 nbsp nbsp CR 502 west Closter Dock Road Closter WestwoodEastern terminus of CR 502 7 7712 50 nbsp Palisades ParkwayExit 2 on Palisades Parkway access via Alpine Approach Road Henry Hudson Drive 9 7515 69 nbsp Palisades ParkwayExit 3 on Palisades Parkway 10 46 10 8416 83 17 45 nbsp Palisades ParkwayExit 4 on Palisades Parkway 11 870 0019 100 00New Jersey New York state line New YorkRocklandOrangetown2 634 23 nbsp nbsp To NY 340 SparkillAccess via NY 981H NY 981J South Nyack5 999 64 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 I 287 New York Thruway Governor Mario M Cuomo Bridge New York City AlbanyExit 10 I 87 I 287 Thruway Nyack7 1111 44 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 I 287 New York Thruway NY 59 west Governor Mario M Cuomo Bridge New York City AlbanyExit 11 I 87 I 287 Thruway eastern terminus of NY 59 Clarkstown12 8120 62 nbsp nbsp NY 303 south West Nyack CongersNorthern terminus of NY 303 13 4221 60 nbsp nbsp NY 304 south New CityNorthern terminus of NY 304 Village of Haverstraw15 8725 54Westside Avenue NY 981F north Southern terminus of unsigned NY 981F 16 2726 18 nbsp nbsp US 202 west SuffernSouthern terminus of concurrency with US 202 Stony Point nbsp nbsp nbsp To Seven Lakes Drive west Bear Mountain State ParkAccess via South Entrance Road nbsp nbsp Seven Lakes Drive west Bear Mountain State ParkEastern terminus of Seven Lakes Drive OrangeHighlands26 6742 92 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 6 US 202 east Bear Mountain Bridge Palisades Parkway south Peekskill Cold Spring Central Valley New JerseyNorthern terminus of US 202 concurrency and Palisades Parkway Bear Mountain Circle 28 4645 80Old State Road NY 980U north Southern terminus of unsigned NY 980U Highland Falls29 3647 25 nbsp nbsp NY 218 north West Point Highland FallsInterchange southern terminus of NY 218 Highlands31 3150 39 nbsp nbsp NY 218 south West Point Highland FallsInterchange southern terminus of concurrency with NY 218 32 0751 61 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 218 north NY 293 south Central ValleyInterchange northern terminus of NY 293 and of concurrency with NY 218 Cornwall37 6260 54 nbsp CR 9 Angola Road Interchange 38 0661 25 nbsp nbsp nbsp CR 107 Quaker Avenue to NY 32 Cornwall Storm King Art CenterInterchange formerly NY 307 hamlet of Firthcliffe 38 6662 22 nbsp CR 32 Willow Avenue Interchange hamlet of Firthcliffe 39 5163 59 nbsp nbsp NY 218 south CornwallInterchange northern terminus of NY 218 Town of New WindsorRiver RoadInterchange hamlet of New Windsor 42 3068 08 nbsp nbsp NY 94 south Vails GateNorthern terminus of NY 94 City of Newburgh43 2269 56 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 17K west Broadway NY 32 south to I 87 New York ThruwayEastern terminus of NY 17K southern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 South Street NY 980P Former routing of NY 52 Town of Newburgh44 52 44 5871 65 71 74 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 84 NY 52 Newburgh Beacon Bridge NY 32 north to I 87 New York Thruway Fishkill Danbury New Paltz Port Jervis Stewart AirportExit 39 on I 84 NY 52 northern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 hamlet of Balmville UlsterLloyd58 4794 10 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 44 east NY 55 east to US 9 Mid Hudson Bridge PoughkeepsieInterchange southern terminus of concurrency with US 44 NY 55 59 0395 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 44 west NY 55 westNorthern terminus of concurrency with US 44 NY 55 hamlet of Highland 60 9198 03 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 299 west to I 87 New York Thruway New PaltzEastern terminus of NY 299 Esopus72 92117 35Old Route 9W NY 984D north Southern terminus of unsigned NY 984D former routing of US 9W hamlet of Port Ewen City of Kingston74 12119 28Delaware AvenueInterchange Ulster75 37121 30 nbsp nbsp NY 32 north Saugerties Kingston Rhinecliff BridgeSouthern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 City of Kingston75 65121 75 nbsp nbsp NY 32 south TillsonNorthern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 Ulster76 96123 86Ulster Avenue NY 981M south Northern terminus of unsigned NY 981M 78 04125 59 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 209 south NY 199 east to I 87 New York Thruway US 9 NY 9G Rhinecliff Bridge EllenvilleInterchange northern terminus of US 209 western terminus of NY 199 Town of Saugerties83 70134 70 nbsp nbsp NY 32 south GlascoSouthern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 Village of Saugerties85 92138 27 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 32 north NY 212 west to I 87 New York ThruwayNorthern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 eastern terminus of NY 212 GreeneVillage of Catskill96 33155 03 nbsp nbsp NY 23A west Tannersville HunterEastern terminus of NY 23A 96 88155 91 nbsp nbsp NY 385 north Downtown CatskillSouthern terminus of NY 385 Town of Catskill98 13157 92 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 23 to I 87 New York Thruway US 9 NY 9G Rip Van Winkle Bridge Cairo HudsonInterchange Town of Coxsackie107 54173 07 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 81 west NY 385 south Greenville CoxsackieEastern terminus of NY 81 northern terminus of NY 385 107 74173 39Mansion Street Extension NY 910U south Former routing of US 9W northern terminus of unsigned NY 910U Town of New Baltimore109 73176 59 nbsp nbsp I 87 New York ThruwayExit 21B on I 87 Thruway 112 02180 28 nbsp nbsp NY 144 north New BaltimoreSouthern terminus of NY 144 AlbanyRavena115 03185 12 nbsp NY 143 Westerlo Ravena Bethlehem120 74194 31 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NY 396 to I 87 New York Thruway South Bethlehem SelkirkHamlet of Beckers Corners 125 91202 63 nbsp nbsp NY 32 south DelmarInterchange southern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 126 30203 26 nbsp nbsp NY 32 northNorthern terminus of concurrency with NY 32 Albany127 10204 55 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 New York Thruway I 787 north Rensselaer TroySouthern terminus and exit 1 on I 787 exit 23 on I 87 Thruway 127 96205 93 nbsp nbsp NY 443 west Delaware Avenue Southern terminus of concurrency with NY 443 129 31208 10 nbsp US 20 Madison Avenue nbsp nbsp NY 443 endsEastern terminus of NY 443 129 68208 70 nbsp NY 5 Washington Avenue 129 96209 15 nbsp US 9 Clinton Avenue 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Electronic toll collectionSee also edit nbsp U S Roads portal nbsp New Jersey portal nbsp New York state portal List of reference routes in New YorkReferences edit a b US 9W Straight Line Diagram PDF New Jersey Department of Transportation May 2009 Retrieved March 17 2020 a b 2008 Traffic Volume Report for New York State PDF New York State Department of Transportation June 16 2009 pp 30 32 Retrieved May 26 2010 a b c Automobile Blue Book Vol 1 1927 ed Chicago Automobile Blue Book Inc 1927 This edition shows U S Routes as they were first officially signed in 1927 State of New York Department of Highways 1909 The Highway Law Albany NY J B Lyon Company p 54 Retrieved May 26 2010 New York State Department of Highways 1920 Report of the State Commissioner of Highways Albany NY J B Lyon Company pp 499 500 Retrieved May 26 2010 New York State Legislature 1921 Tables of Laws and Codes Amended or Repealed Laws of the State of New York passed at the One Hundred and Forty Fourth Session of the Legislature Albany NY J B Lyon Company pp 42 45 46 Retrieved May 26 2010 New York s Main Highways Designated by Numbers The New York Times December 21 1924 p XX9 a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas western New York Map Rand McNally and Company 1926 Retrieved May 26 2010 a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas eastern New York Map Rand McNally and Company 1926 Retrieved May 26 2010 Rand McNally official 1920 auto trails map New York City and vicinity Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved July 3 2022 Route No 18 N From Hoboken to New York State line by way of Weehawken West Hoboken town of Union North Bergen Fairview Ridgefield Palisade Park Fort Lee Englewood Cliffs Tenafly and Alpine New Jersey State Legislations New Jersey State Legislature 1923 State of New Jersey Laws of 1927 Chapter 319 ROUTE NO 1 Alpine to Bayonne Beginning at the New York state line on state highway route heretofore designated as Route No 18 north in Alpine and terminating in Bayonne by way of Alpine Tenafly Fort Lee and Ridgefield in Bergen county North Bergen Jersey City and Bayonne in Hudson county L 1929 c 126 p 215 s 1 1953 renumbering New Jersey Department of Highways Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Retrieved July 31 2009 New Road Signs Ready in New Jersey The New York Times December 16 1952 Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved July 20 2009 Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways Bureau of Public Roads October 30 1925 Retrieved February 24 2018 New York and Vicinity Map Rand McNally and Company 1926 Retrieved May 26 2010 Bureau of Public Roads amp American Association of State Highway Officials November 11 1926 United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials Map 1 7 000 000 Washington DC United States Geological Survey OCLC 32889555 Retrieved November 7 2013 via Wikimedia Commons a b 1927 Tydol Trails Map north New Jersey Map Tydol Oil Company Retrieved May 26 2010 a b c New York in Soconyland Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1929 a b Road Map of New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Standard Oil Company of New York 1930 a b c Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1932 a b New York Map Cartography by H M Gousha Company Kendall Refining Company 1931 a b Texaco Road Map New York Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company Texas Oil Company 1933 Mark Ways in the City The New York Times December 16 1934 p XX12 Automobile Legal Association ALA Automobile Green Book 1930 31 and 1931 32 editions Scarborough Motor Guide Co Boston 1930 and 1931 The 1930 31 edition shows New York state routes prior to the 1930 renumbering Dickinson Leon A January 12 1930 New Signs for State Highways The New York Times p 136 Route Changes in State Listed New York Post March 30 1935 p 18 Retrieved June 13 2017 a b c d Mathieu George M August 6 1939 Storm King Cut Off Pushed The New York Times pp XX1 XX10 a b Route U S 9W Improved The New York Times November 21 1937 p 196 Mathieu George M September 22 1940 A New Route North The New York Times p XX1 Mathieu George M May 25 1941 A Cut Off With Views The New York Times p XX2 New York with Pictorial Guide Map Cartography by General Drafting Esso 1942 Official Highway Map of New York State Map 1947 48 ed Cartography by General Drafting State of New York Department of Public Works New York Map Cartography by General Drafting Exxon 1979 I Love New York Tourism Map Map Cartography by Rand McNally and Company State of New York 1981 New York State Department of Transportation January 2012 Official Description of Highway Touring Routes Bicycling Touring Routes Scenic Byways amp Commemorative Memorial Designations in New York State PDF Retrieved February 1 2012 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 9WKML is from Wikidata nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to U S Route 9W U S Route 9W at Alps Roads New York Routes An enlarged view of road jurisdiction at the Fort Lee approaches to the George Washington Bridge PDF New Jersey Roads US 9W US 9W NYS Thruway Exit 10 Empire State Roads com US 9W NYS Thruway Exit 11 Empire State Roads com Capital Highways Mid Crosstown Arterial Police Scanner Frequencies for Route 9W Speed Limits for Route 9W in New Jersey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 9W amp oldid 1224151026 Bypasses, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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