New York State Route 74 (NY 74) and Vermont Route 74 (VT 74) are state highways in the northeastern United States, connected by one of the last remaining
cable ferries in North America. Together they extend for through
Essex County, New York
Essex County is a county in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2020 census, the population was 37,381. Its county seat is the hamlet of Elizabethtown. Its name is from the English county of Essex. Essex is one of only 2 counties that are ...
, and
Addison County, Vermont. NY 74 begins at exit 28 off
Interstate 87 (I-87) in
the hamlet of Severance in the
Adirondack Mountains region of the northern part of
New York State. It extends to the western shore of
Lake Champlain in
Ticonderoga. There, the seasonal Fort Ticonderoga–Larrabees Point Ferry carries cars across the state border into
Vermont, where VT 74 starts at the lake's eastern shore and terminates later at a junction with
VT 30 in the town of
Cornwall.
The ferry connecting the two highways, predating both NY 74 and VT 74, began operation in 1759 on an informal basis. The ferry operation was formalized at the close of the 18th century and upgraded to a cable system in 1946.
Due to extensive changes in designations in both states during the 20th century, the entire length of the present highway consists of renamed segments from other highways. The New York portion of the cross-state Route 74 west of Ticonderoga was designated as part of
NY 73 in the
1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, while the Vermont section carried several different designations from the 1920s to the late 1930s, when it became solely part of Vermont Route F-9. NY 73 was extended east to Lake Champlain in the 1950s—replacing New York State Route 347—and VT F-9 was split into
VT 73 and VT 74 shortly afterward. The Schroon–Ticonderoga highway was redesignated as NY 74 on July 1, 1972 after NY 73 was cut back to its current eastern terminus in
Elizabethtown.
Route description
NY 74
NY 74 originates at exit 28 of the
Adirondack Northway (I-87) in the town of
Schroon. The starting interchange is close to local landmark Severance Hill, which reaches an elevation of . NY 74 intersects the north–south
U.S. Route 9 (US 9) shortly after the northbound ramps of the Adirondack Northway. It then meets Stowell Road just before crossing the
Schroon River
The Schroon River ( ) is a U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map accessed October 3, 2011 tributary of the Hudson River in the southern Adirondack Mountains of New York, beginning at the ...
. The highway meets a few local road intersections just south of Goosebury Hill before encountering Paradox Lake. NY 74 runs mostly parallel to the lake and intersects with a local campground entrance road as it continues eastward from Schroon.
Cotters Pond is a small landmark located beyond a few mountains and hills on the southern side of NY 74 near the end of Paradox Lake. Cotters Pond, by state law, is a water body that cannot be used for baitfishing; this was designated by the
New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (informally referred to as NYSDEC, DEC, EnCon or NYSENCON) is a department of New York state government. The department guides and regulates the conservation, improvement, and protection ...
.
Shortly afterward, NY 74 passes Bumbo Pond and enters the hamlet of Paradox. After leaving Paradox, NY 74 turns to the southeast along the base of Skiff Mountain. The highway then approaches a creek that flows into Eagle Lake. NY 74 crosses over
Eagle Lake and runs along the base of Eagle Cliff and the shores of the lake. After leaving Eagle Lake, the highway intersects with
County Route 2 (CR 2), the first numbered highway that NY 74 encounters after US 9.
This stretch of NY 74 skirts the base of Keeney Mountain, which peaks at . NY 74 then intersects with
CR 56, which parallels the main route to the south. CR 56 merges back with NY 74, which leaves the mountainous region for the hamlet of Ticonderoga. NY 74 intersects with
NY 9N
New York State Route 9N (NY 9N) is a north–south state highway in northeastern New York in the United States. It extends from an intersection with U.S. Route 9 (US 9), NY 29, and NY 50 in the city of Saratoga Spri ...
and NY 22 in the hamlet; the latter of the two highways becomes concurrent with NY 74. NY 22 and NY 74 continue to the east, heading around the outskirts of Ticonderoga. NY 74 intersects with
CR 49 before NY 74 turns to the southeast. NY 22 and NY 74 head southward toward the center of Ticonderoga. At the intersection with Montcalm Street, NY 74 turns eastward off NY 22, which heads southward for
Washington County.
NY 74 crosses local roads as it continues eastward toward Lake Champlain. The highway passes the entrance to
Fort Ticonderoga and the
Ticonderoga Amtrak station. The New York portion of NY 74 terminates at a ferry landing by Lake Champlain at the state border.
Fort Ticonderoga–Larrabees Point Ferry
The Fort Ticonderoga–Larrabees Point Ferry is the oldest and southernmost ferry on Lake Champlain.
Its cable system consists of two steel cables in parallel alignment.
The current ferry barge, in operation since 1959, is powered by a sixteen-ton tugboat built in 1979 that can hold up to 18 cars.
The seasonal ferry route is half a mile long and operates from May through October.
The seven-minute passage operates during daylight hours.
VT 74
After crossing the state line via the Fort Ticonderoga–Larrabees Point Ferry, VT 74 begins its track into Vermont. The highway heads a short distance to the north, passing a thinly populated area in Shoreham, as intermittent forest yields to fields and farmlands. After from the border, VT 74 intersects with
VT 73 before encountering Barnum Hill Road. Near the Barnum Hill intersection, VT 74 passes developed areas and bends more toward the north. VT 74 then turns to the northeast at Smith Street and enters a patch of forest. Afterward VT 74 climbs a hill and intersects with Harrington Hill Road where it turns northward once again.
Fields and forests surround this thinly populated stretch of highway. At the intersection with Blue Harbor Road, VT 74 turns to the east and heads toward downtown Shoreham. Within central Shoreham, VT 74 is known as Main Street and has a short concurrency with VT 22A. As VT 74 leaves the densely populated portion of Shoreham, the concurrency ends and VT 74 takes an eastward turn toward Cornwall.
As VT 74 returns to the rural countryside it bends toward the northeast for most of the distance to Cornwall. Through this stretch the highway winds through forests and occasional farmland. VT 74 straightens at an intersection with Bates Road. A connector road called North Palmer Road merges with VT 74 shortly afterward. VT 74 winds again for a stretch and straightens a second time near the intersection with Elmendorf Road as it continues toward Cornwall, intersecting with several township highways and approaching increasingly residential areas. At Clark Road in Cornwall, VT 74 turns to the northeast once again, passing through more forests before terminating at
VT 30 in Cornwall.
Early history
Schroon and its early highways
Settlers of European descent began to populate the region near modern Schroon around 1797. The area's first municipality was the town of
Crown Point, which originally included considerable portions of thinly populated land that later developed into separate townships. The first of these divisions occurred on March 20, 1804 with the establishment of the town of Schroon. Minerva split from Crown Point in March 1817, before another municipal reorganization in 1840 implemented further reductions to the land area of Crown Point. During this period two thoroughfares served the area that correspond to parts of modern NY 74 and US 9. One of these old state roads traversed the route covered by the current alignment of NY 74 from Schroon to Ticonderoga.
The entire length of NY 74 from Ticonderoga to Schroon covers the route that the Ticonderoga and Schroon Turnpike Road Company (chartered in April 1832
) was to toll. Two toll gates were to be erected specifically for use on the highway, and the charter allowed for additional toll gates at a spacing of approximately one for every ten miles of completed highway. The turnpike management was to raise funds by selling 600 shares valued at $25 (equivalent to $ in ) each. $20,000 (equivalent to $ in ) was also set aside for properties along the highway. Beyond its charter, there is no further mention of the company in New York state law; therefore, it's possible that the company folded before the completion of a turnpike.
Designation history
Designations from 1913 to the 1930s
In 1913, the
New York State Legislature designated most of modern NY 74 as Route 22-b, an unsigned
legislative route. It ran for from Route 22 (now
US 9) in
Schroon to the western edge of the then-
village of Ticonderoga.
On March 1, 1921, Route 22-b became part of Route 48, a new route created as part of a partial renumbering of New York's legislative route system.
In 1924, when state highways were first publicly signed with route numbers, the highway from Schroon to Ticonderoga remained unnumbered.
During the
1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, the segment of modern NY 74 between
US 9 in
Schroon and NY 22 in
Ticonderoga was designated as part of
NY 73,
a route extending from
NY 28N in
Tahawus
Tahawus (also called Adirondac, or McIntyre, pronounced ) was a village in the Town of Newcomb, Essex County, New York, United States. It is now a ghost town situated in the Adirondack Park. Tahawus is located in Essex County within the unpop ...
to Ticonderoga. NY 73 followed the
Blue Ridge Road
Blue Ridge Road is a long roadway in Essex County, New York, in the United States. The road is designated as County Route 84 (CR 84) from NY 28N in Newcomb to Interstate 87 (I-87) in North Hudson, and as New York State Rou ...
from Tahawus to
North Hudson and had an
overlap with US 9 from North Hudson to Schroon.
The portion of NY 73 between Tahawus and
North Hudson was removed from the state highway system . As a result, NY 73 was truncated to a new western terminus at US 9 in Schroon, eliminating the concurrency with US 9.
The Blue Ridge Road is now designated as
CR 84 from NY 28N in Tawahus to the
Adirondack Northway in North Hudson,
and as NY 910K, a short unsigned
reference route, from the Northway to US 9.
On the Vermont side, the road connecting Larrabees Point to the main north–south highways in the area was designated as VT F-9 by 1926. VT F-9 began at the ferry landing at Larrabees Point and continued northeast to Shoreham Center, where it briefly overlapped with then-VT 30A (modern
VT 22A). Past VT 30A, VT F-9 continued east along what are now town highways through
Whiting to
Leicester
Leicester ( ) is a city status in the United Kingdom, city, Unitary authorities of England, unitary authority and the county town of Leicestershire in the East Midlands of England. It is the largest settlement in the East Midlands.
The city l ...
, where it ended at a junction with
US 7. At the time, modern VT 74 between Shoreham and Cornwall centers was known as VT F-9A while what is now
VT 73 from Larrabees Point to Brown Lane north of the town center of
Orwell
Eric Arthur Blair (25 June 1903 – 21 January 1950), better known by his pen name George Orwell, was an English novelist, essayist, journalist, and critic. His work is characterised by lucid prose, social criticism, opposition to totalitari ...
was part of
VT F-10A.
Changes from 1933 onward
By 1933, the highway linking NY 22 in Ticonderoga to the ferry for Larrabees Point became part of
NY 8.
NY 8 was realigned to follow
NY 22 north from Ticonderoga to
Crown Point, where it left NY 22 to follow
NY 347 (modern
NY 185) to the
Champlain Bridge. The NY 347 designation was reassigned to NY 8's former routing between NY 22 and the ferry landing east of Ticonderoga.
VT F-9, meanwhile, was extended southward to Orwell over VT F-10A by 1938. Like VT F-10A, it initially bypassed Orwell to the north on Brown Lane;
however, it was realigned in the late 1930s to follow modern VT 73 into Orwell. Around the same time, VT F-9 was realigned east of Shoreham to follow VT F-9A northeast to Cornwall. The VT F-9A designation was eliminated while the former routing of VT F-9 between Shoreham and Leicester became unnumbered.
In November 1952, New York extended NY 73 east to the ferry landing by way of NY 347 and Wicker and Montcalm Streets.
Vermont renumbered the Larrabees Point–Orwell section of VT F-9 to VT 73 in 1954 in order to match the New York route number. At the same time, the Larrabees Point–Cornwall section of VT F-9 was renumbered by Vermont to VT 74.
[ ]
NY 73 was truncated to its current eastern terminus in
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on July 1, 1972, eliminating a lengthy
overlap with US 9, while its former routing from Schroon to Lake Champlain was renumbered to NY 74, matching the other Vermont route number that ends in Larrabees Point. The
already existing NY 74 in Chautauqua County (in the
Jamestown area) was renumbered to
NY 474 as a result.
The opening of the
Adirondack Northway in 1967 also resulted in a slight shift of the western terminus of NY 74 from US 9 to I-87.
By 1981, NY 74 was rerouted to follow its current alignment around the northeastern edge of Ticonderoga, on a concurrency with NY 22.
The highway has remained the same since that date.
The New York State Department of Transportation has announced a project to repave NY 74 from Chilson to Paradox. The project is in preliminary development, with construction is expected to begin in early 2013 and reach completion about a year later. Funding will come from state sources and run an estimated cost of $8.6 million.
Ferry history
According to its website, the ferry operated informally from 1759 and in an organized way from 1799.
The earliest ferries are believed to have been
rowboats or
canoes; "a double-ended sailing scow was in service by 1800. This vessel was about long, with a mainsail that would swing completely around the mast to provide a simple means of reversing course."
Ferry size continued to increase with traffic until the system upgraded to a cable guidance system in 1946.
John S. Larrabee of Vermont established the first regular ferry at the location in the late 18th century.
The
Vermont State Legislature
The Vermont General Assembly is the legislative body of the state of Vermont, in the United States. The Legislature is formally known as the "General Assembly," but the style of "Legislature" is commonly used, including by the body itself. The Ge ...
approved a franchise for a ferry from Larrabees Point to Ticonderoga in 1907, to the Shoreham and Ticonderoga Ferry Company.
The New York State Legislature granted the ferry a franchise in 1918.
Major intersections
See also
*
*
References
External links
Photographs of VT 74 termini (state-ends.com)
{{DEFAULTSORT:State Route 74 (New York-Vermont)
074
074
New York State Route 074
Vermont Route 074