NEW YORK STATE ROUTE 52


'New York State Route 52' is a -long state highway in the southeastern part of the state of New York. It generally runs from west to east, beginning at the Pennsylvania state line in the Delaware River near Narrowsburg, crossing the Hudson River on the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge, and ending in Carmel. Route 52 and Route 55, both major east-west routes of the Mid-Hudson Region, run parallel to each other, intersecting in downtown Liberty.
With the exception of the section overlapping Interstate 84, most of Route 52 is a two-lane road through lightly developed rural areas. The road west of the Hudson River serves a number of small communities in the southern Catskills, while it closely parallels I-84 east of the Hudson.

Contents
Route description
Delaware to Shawangunks
Shawangunks to Hudson River
Hudson River to Carmel
History
Predecessor turnpikes
Public ownership
Formal designation
Realignments and detours
Future issues
Miscellanea
The Ellenville split
Dual roadway in Walden
Major intersections
See also
References
External links

Route description


Elevation profile of Route 52

Route 52 runs through several distinct regions: the Catskills, a lightly-populated area from the Delaware River to the Shawangunk Ridge; a relatively flat area from the east slope of the Shawangunks through Orange County to the Hudson River; another flat area east of the Hudson to Stormville; and part of the Taconics south through Kent and Carmel to the eastern terminus.
Communities[2]

Narrowsburg
Jeffersonville
Liberty
Woodbourne
Ellenville
Walker Valley
Pine Bush
Walden
Orange Lake
Fishkill
Stormville
Lake Carmel
Carmel

Delaware to Shawangunks

Although much of its length runs through less remote territory than NY 55, at its western end it is 52 that lies further from New York City. From the bridge at Narrowsburg it joins NY 97 briefly, strikes out into the countryside trending gradually northwards, picks up NY 17B for a short distance at Fosterdale, and it is firmly headed north.[3]
The western half of Sullivan County is actually less developed and populated despite its flatter topography, as the summer resort industry Sullivan is known for was and is concentrated in the eastern towns of the county, closer to the Catskills. Much of the surrounding land is farms or woods. There is no direct trunk route for 52 to follow, and it overlaps several county roads (indeed, some sections are maintained by the county as CR 24 [Race Course Road] from the PA line to NY 97, CR 111 [Narrowsburg Road] from NY 97 to the Cochecton town line, CR 112 [Narrowsburg Road] from the Tutsen town line to Lake Huntington, and CR 113 [Narrowsburg Road] from Lake Huntington to NY 17B & CR 114 [Newburgh Turnpike]). Some older-style New York State Route signs, with the "NY" on top, can be seen here.
At Kenoza Lake NY 52A, 52's only suffixed subroute, goes off to the west near a historic stone bridge. A few miles later, at tiny Jeffersonville, the only incorporated village in the eastern half of the county, 52 finally bends back eastward. The roadway becomes smoother and its right-of-way wider. The trip through the hamlets of Youngsville and White Sulphur Springs to Liberty passes much more quickly than the previous section.
In Liberty, the first large town along 52, it meets up with 55 and the two even share a few blocks downtown. At the village's eastern limit, it crosses the NY 17 Quickway, exactly a hundred driving miles from the city. Beyond 17, it passes some shopping plazas, then heads out into the country again along a good quality roadway, recently repaved.
Sullivan's eastern half offers the hamlets of Loch Sheldrake and Woodbourne, both of which bustle in the summertime, particularly with Orthodox Jews from the city who have traditionally taken their families to the area for the summer. Sullivan County Community College and the two nearby state prisons keep the economy going in the off-season.
52 carries NY 42 over the Neversink River, after which it leaves northward to the end of its southern segment. Just past Woodbourne Correctional Facility, it crosses into Ulster County. The highway from there to Ellenville is largely a straight, gradual descent off the Catskill Plateau through primarily wooded and undeveloped land (a few buildings on either side of the road mark the hamlets of Dairyland and Greenfield Park), with the Bush Kill coming in on the south side as the village approaches.
View of Catskills from 52 along Shawangunk Ridge east of Ellenville.

At Ellenville's western boundary, 52 appears to split (see below). Once across the village, just to the east, 52 encounters its most significant terrain feature, the Shawangunk Ridge, which looms over the village. The highway turns abruptly southward at the village's eastern boundary and begins a gradual three-mile (4.8 km) climb up the ridge. This is a very scenic stretch of 52, as several overlooks on the upper portions offer sweeping views of the Catskills, and closer to it there are the range's famous brilliant cliffs. The Long Path hiking trail also leaves its aqua blazes on a stretch of the road it shares.[4]
At the crest, near the road to Cragsmoor, 52 reaches nearly 1,500 feet (457 m) in elevation, turns again eastward, and begins an equally gradual descent.
Shawangunks to Hudson River

The wooded route down the east side of the Shawangunks offers its own vistas of the land ahead — at one point, on clear days, it is possible to see all the way to the Hudson Highlands. Walker Valley is the first town encountered, at the point where the highway begins to level out again. From here several more miles of road, through more open country, brings 52 to the Shawangunk Kill bridge and the Orange County line.
Downtown Pine Bush immediately presents itself, along with what was until recently the well-developed hamlet's only traffic light, at NY 302's northern terminus. A mile later, with a Dunkin' Donuts on one side and a McDonald's on the other, the hamlet ends and countryside resumes.
The new Walden High Bridge, carrying Route 52 across the Wallkill River.

There are many panoramas of the Shawangunks along the next stretch of highway, as it passes mostly open fields with a few wooded interruptions. Six miles (9.6 km) east of Pine Bush, 52 enters Walden, the largest town on it thus far, first as North Montgomery Street. This changes to South Montgomery at the Oak Street intersection, where 52 temporarily turned on to cross the Wallkill River at the Low Bridge from 2003-2005 while a new High Bridge (officially the Walden Veterans' Memorial Bridge) was being built. The new bridge, where 52 becomes Main Street, crosses the river at least 50 feet (15 m) above water level and provides a view to the waterfalls and power station just upriver.
The Newburgh-Beacon Bridge

In downtown Walden, 52 meets NY 208 and is multiplexed with it for two short blocks, before resuming its eastward course. The road ahead runs through more farmlands and woodlots, across the Catskill Aqueduct and past the swampy south end of Orange Lake. In the Town of Newburgh, after crossing under the New York State Thruway, residential and commercial development becomes continuous along the road. 52 intersects NY 300 in the built-up area known as Gardnertown for an early settler, whose house is visible from the junction, and then passes through the suburban area around Algonquin and Winona lakes, both fed by Orange Lake's outlet brook, before reaching I-84.
Hudson River to Carmel

Historic downtown Fishkill.

52 and 84 have been gradually converging for several miles at this point, and the two merge at the interstate's Exit 8, just outside the Newburgh city limits, to cross the Hudson together via the bridge. Just past the bridge's toll plaza are the ramps for NY 9D, just on the northern line of the city of Beacon. They will continue to run close to each other for the rest of 52's route. The concurrency lasts seven miles (11.2 km), well into Dutchess County before 52 resumes its pre-bridge course at Exit 12, becoming the main street of yet another village, Fishkill. Here it is the backbone of a historic district. Just east of the downtown area is the major junction with US 9, and 52 through Fishkill is often heavily congested at rush hour as drivers use it as a shortcut past similarly-congested sections of I-84 from southbound 9.
I-84 overpass above 52 near Fishkill

East of Route 9, there is still considerable development along the road although it opens up somewhat as it passes the southern termini of NY 376 and NY 82, in Hopewell Junction and Brinckerhoff to the Taconic State Parkway junction. Traffic lessens out past the Taconic as it is no longer a major connecting route in that direction, and after Stormville and NY 216 52 once again begins to feel like a country road, winding under a high bridge carrying 84 once again and crossing the Appalachian Trail as it leaves Dutchess to enter its last county, Putnam, at the hamlet of Ludingtonville.
Here, it reaches Lake Carmel, the most populous community along its entire route, where NY 311 provides a feeder route back to 84. Passing along the shore of the eponymous lake itself, it then reaches Carmel proper, and the eastern terminus of NY 301, before itself terminating at US 6 just south of town.

History


Like many state highways in the region, Route 52 follows a number of roads originally built as private turnpikes during the early 19th century. While the turnpikes made significant improvements to very poor roads, they were not popular with the public and eventually failed, leaving their roads for the county or state to maintain.
Predecessor turnpikes

One of these - the 'Woodbourne and Ellenville Turnpike Company' - ran from Woodbourne to Ellenville. After being incorporated by the New York Legislature on April 17, 1830,[5] it built and opened a turnpike from Ellenville on the Delaware and Hudson Canal west to Woodbourne in 1838, and later extended it further in that direction to Liberty.[6]
To the east of Ellenville, the 'Newburgh and Ellenville Plank Road Company' was proposed in late 1849 to build and charge tolls on a plank road between Ellenville and Newburgh, major markets on the canal and Hudson respectively. It was incorporated on March 24, 1850 under the state's general incorporation law. The company decided shortly thereafter to build on a southern route; the supporters of a northern route organized the Newburgh and Shawangunk Plank Road two weeks later. Both roads were completed in December 1851; an opening celebration for the Newburgh and Ellenville was held at Ellenville on December 22.[7] The south route is now, with some modifications, part of Route 52, while the north route carries parts of Route 32 and Route 300, becoming a county road (Bruyn Turnpike) west of Wallkill.
Other former turnpikes used by Route 52 include short lengths of the Jeffersonville and Monticello Turnpike (Jeffersonville to Briscoe Road), Ulster and Orange Branch Turnpike (Liberty to Cross Farm Road), Philipstown Turnpike (Pecksville to Ludingtonville), and Putnam and Dutchess Turnpike (Ludingtonville to the end in Carmel). By the 1890s, the entire route that would become Route 52 existed as public or turnpike roads.[8]
Public ownership

After the demise of the turnpikes, the State Commission of Highways was created by the legislature in 1898 to improve and maintain state highways. In 1909, a connected network of routes was laid out by the legislature; none of the present Route 52 was included.[9] It was also not part of the system of signed State Routes numbered in 1924.[10] By 1926, the Poughkeepsie-Patterson Route 39 was signed, using a short piece of what is now Route 52 between East Fishkill and Stormville.[11]
Formal designation

Route 52 as it exists today was designated in the 1930 renumbering,[12] but it was several years before the road was improved and paved.[13] At its west end, the route connected with U.S. Route 106, which had been designated in 1926 and ended at the Delaware River on the Pennsylvania state line.[14] US 106 was never extended into New York,[15] and is now Pennsylvania Route 652 near the border.
Realignments and detours

The only major change to Route 52's routing since then came with the opening of the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge on November 2, 1963.[16] Prior to then, Route 52 had crossed the Hudson River on the Newburgh-Beacon Ferry, approaching from the west on Dupont Avenue and Broadway (overlapping Route 17K on Broadway) and from the east on Fishkill Avenue and Wolcott Avenue (now mostly Route 52 Business).[17]
Natural disasters and construction have forced temporary closures and reroutings in some areas. On December 31, 2002, a rockslide along the stretch climbing the Shawangunks east of Ellenville buried an 85-foot (25 m) section of the road with an estimated 1,000 cubic yards (800 m³) of rock and dirt. The state Department of Transporation closed the road temporarily. Automobile traffic was detoured via several local roads; trucks had to make a lengthy side trip via Route 17[18] During the 2003-2005 construction of the new bridge over the Wallkill River in Walden, Route 52 was routed to Walden's other bridge (the "Low Bridge") via Oak Street, which intersects the highway twice within the village. This required the erection of two temporary traffic signals, causing some new traffic problems in the village.[19] Truck traffic was detoured to Route 17K via Albany Post Road and Stone Castle Road.[20]

Future issues


The congested eastern end of the NY 208 overlap in Walden.

The village of Walden has noted, in its 2005 Comprehensive Plan, the difficulties created by the oblique intersection at the eastern end of the Route 208 concurrency. Traffic on northbound 208 comes to a stop sign at the intersection, where 52 comes in from the right at a slightly lower grade and a sharp angle, with the view mostly blocked by a building. It is also just opposite one of two curb cuts for a busy Hess gas station. At rush hour, the traffic light at the nearby northern end often backs cars up along 52 for some distance, making the turn into the gas station difficult, especially when vehicles on 52 make the left turn into the curb cut.[21]
The layout of the intersection is very poor for trucks making this turn, and the congestion all these factors create has been forcing more drivers to resort to side streets, the village believes, since traffic counts have been going up on 52 and 208 but down on the concurrency. It is hoping to work with the state DOT on marking an alternate route for trucks.[22]

Miscellanea


Parallel roadways in eastern Walden.

The Ellenville split

Eastern end of Ellenville split.

Across Ellenville, both Center and Canal streets carry 52 shields and reference markers as they run parallel across the village. While NYSDOT does not list a separate reference route in the village[23], a 2005 Ulster County Transportation Council map shows both as state highways.[24]
Some of NYSDOT's own documents suggest as well that 52 divides into two two-way routes in Ellenville. An old quadrangle map shows the shield applying to both streets.[25] State traffic signal regulations make reference to both Canal and Center being part of Route 52[26], and the National Bridge Inventory lists two bridges over Sandburg Creek along Route 52 in the village.[27]
Since Canal has a stop sign at its western junction with Center, and Center at the eastern fork, this results in each street being the optimum route across the village depending on the direction of travel. When coming from the west, taking the fork onto Canal at the western boundary allows a driver to build up speed before beginning the climb up the Shawangunks. Conversely, quickly bearing onto Center at the end of that climb means not having to stop at the fork on the other side of the village.
Dual roadway in Walden

From the western of the two Tin Brook crossings within the village to the eastern village line, 52 is paralleled by an older route of East Main Street that remains in use, separated by a thin median with some trees and telephone on it. East of Woodruff Street, the older road functions as a service road for the residents and businesses in that area, mostly on the north side as the south side is a village park. The former right-of-way visibly continues to Highland Avenue although most of it has been revegetated.

Major intersections


|-
|rowspan=2|
|rowspan=2|
81.62

!rowspan=2 colspan=2|Newburgh-Beacon Bridge over the Hudson River
|-
|rowspan=8|Dutchess
|}

See also



New York State Route 52 Business, the former routing of NY 52 through Beacon

References


1. Traffic Data Report - Routes 32 to 55
2. New York State Department of Transportation, 1:24,000 Digital Raster Quadrangles, accessed June 24, 2007
3.
4. New York - New Jersey Trail Conference, ''Guide to the Long Path'', Fourth edition 1996, ISBN 1880775069, 79-80.
5. The Revised Statutes of the State of New-York, Volume III, 1829, p. 623
6. James Eldridge Quinlan, History of Sullivan County, 1873, p. 254
7. E. M. Ruttenber, History of the Town of Newburgh, 1859, pp. 144-145
8. Joseph R. Bien, Atlas of the state of New York, 1895, accessed via the David Rumsey Map Collection
9. State of New York Commission of Highways, The Highway Law, 1919, pp. 64-89
10. New York Times, New York's Main Highways Designated by Numbers, December 21, 1924, p. XX9
11. National Survey Company, New England, 1926, p. 170
12. Pennsylvania Department of Highways, , May 1930
13. Automobile Legal Association, ''Automobile Green Book'', (Scarborough Motor Guide Company, Boston), 1931
14. , November 11, 1926
15. Pennsylvania Department of Highways, [ftp://ftp.dot.state.pa.us/public/pdf/BPR_PDF_FILES/Maps/Type_10_GHS_Historical_Scans/Wayne_1941.pdf General Highway Map, Wayne County], 1941
16. Bernard Stengren, New York Times, Ceremony Opens Newburgh Span, November 3, 1963, p. 50
17. United States Geological Survey, topographic maps of Newburgh and Beacon, drawn in the 1950s and edited later with purple
18. Gardner, Jessica; January 2, 2003; "Rock slide shuts down Route 52"; ''Times-Herald Record''; retrieved June 24, 2007.
19. Sausa, Bianca; May 24, 2003; "Route 52 bridge closure could cause problems"; ''Times-Herald Record''; retrieved June 24, 2007.
20.
When will it end?
21. This can be verified by traveling to Walden and observing traffic at the intersection during rush hour.
22. , 4-5, retrieved August 7, 2007.
23. New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT); October 2004; ; retrieved June 28, 2007.
24. Ulster County Transportation Council; August 25, 2005; ; retrieved June 28, 2007.
25. NYSDOT; DOT Ellenville Quad; retrieved June 28, 2007.
26. 15 NYCRR 2051.02 (Canal), 15 NYCRR 2351.02 (Center); both retrieved from loislaw.com June 28, 2007.
27. National Bridge Inventory, records 000000002026610 and 000000003346520 retrieved from nationalbridges.com June 28, 2007.

External links



State Ends (Gribblenation) - New York State Route 52

Gribblenation - New York State Route 52

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves