New York State Route 353

New York State Route 353

NYS Route 353 marker

NYS Route 353

Map of Cattaraugus County and vicinity with NY 353 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT and the city of Salamanca
Length: 23.97 mi[3] (38.58 km)
Existed: ca. 1933[1][2] – present
Major junctions
South end: NY 417 in Salamanca
North end: US 62 in Dayton
Location
Counties: Cattaraugus
Highway system

Numbered highways in New York
Interstate • U.S. • N.Y. (former) • Reference • County

NY 352 NY 354

New York State Route 353 (NY 353) is a north–south state highway located within Cattaraugus County, New York, in the United States. It extends for 23.97 miles (38.58 km) from an intersection with NY 417 in the city of Salamanca to a junction with U.S. Route 62 (US 62) in the hamlet of Dayton. In between, the route traverses isolated and undeveloped areas of the county, save for the villages of Little Valley and Cattaraugus. In the latter, NY 353 intersects and briefly overlaps with NY 242.

NY 353 was assigned ca. 1933 to a north–south highway connecting Dayton to nearby Perrysburg. At the time, modern NY 353 was part of NY 18, which extended from the Pennsylvania state line to Rochester via Buffalo. NY 18 was cut back to its current western terminus north of Buffalo ca. 1962, at which time NY 353 was extended southeastward to Salamanca over NY 18's former routing. The original Dayton–Perryburg segment of NY 353 was transferred to Cattaraugus County in 1980 and is now part of County Route 58 (CR 58).

Contents

Route description

NY 353 begins at an intersection with NY 417 in the western portion of the city of Salamanca.[4] It initially heads northward on the city-maintained Center Street[5] through a commercial section of Salamanca; however, the surroundings become more residential after the route crosses the Allegheny River. (The bridge that crosses the Allegheny River has been closed since 2009 so that it can be replaced; it will be reopened in August 2011.) The highway exits the city limits shortly afterward,[4] at which point maintenance of the highway shifts to the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT).[5] Now in the surrounding town of Salamanca, NY 353 continues northward on Center Street into a large, mostly undeveloped valley surrounding Little Valley Creek, where the route passes east of Bucktooth Hill and west of Lindell Lookout. The Center Street name ends about 1 mile (1.6 km) north of the city line at a junction with North State Street (CR 94).[4]

Past State Street, NY 353 heads through the valley as an unnamed road,[4] paralleling the former right-of-way of an Erie-Lackawanna rail line[6] into the town of Little Valley and the small hamlet of Elkdale, where the highway passes a local country club. North of Elkdale, the route curves to the northwest, matching a similar turn in the path of the creek valley. This turn brings NY 353 to the outskirts of the Little Valley, where it intersects with CR 88 (Baker Road), CR 96 (Killborn Corners) and NY 242 at separate junctions east of the village limits. NY 353 becomes concurrent with the latter, following NY 242 into the village of Little Valley, a stark departure from the sparsely populated areas to the southeast. The concurrent routes, known as Rock City Street, head into the village's central business district, where NY 242 splits off to the southwest.[4]

North of Little Valley, NY 353 (known as Erie Street from the center of Little Valley to the village line) passes through mostly rural areas as it winds its way northwestward through a mountainous portion of Cattaraugus County. In the route's short distance in Mansfield, it intersects CR 5 (New Albion Road, formerly NY 18F in the 1930s) and CR 14A (Toad Hollow Road connector) before traveling through several miles of rural New Albion. Just outside the small village of Cattaraugus, NY 353 intercepts CR 76 (Lovers Lane Road) and CR 6 (Leon Road, also part of the former 18F). NY 353 becomes Main Street in the village of Cattaraugus, in the middle of which it intercepts CR 12, the main highway serving the towns of Otto and East Otto. From here, the route crosses hilly, largely undeveloped sections of the towns of New Albion and Persia, meeting CR 4 (Broadway Road, the main spur into Gowanda), CR 57 (which heads into the northwest corner of the county into Markhams and Cottage), and the north end of CR 5 to reach the more level town of Dayton. Just west of the Persia–Dayton town line, NY 353 becomes Dayton-Cattaraugus Road and turns due north, paralleling the town line as it crosses a low-lying section of Dayton. After 2.5 miles (4.0 km), the route makes a sharp turn to the northwest, paralleling the New York and Lake Erie Railroad into the hamlet of Dayton, where NY 353 comes to an end at an intersection with US 62.[4]

History

The section of modern NY 353 from the west end of the overlap with NY 242 in Little Valley to Salamanca was originally designated as part of Route 4, an unsigned legislative route, by the New York State Legislature in 1908.[7][8] When the first set of posted routes in New York were assigned in 1924, this section of legislative Route 4 became part of NY 18, which initially extended south through Salamanca to the Pennsylvania state line and north to Buffalo via Dayton. By 1926, the Salamanca – Little Valley highway was also designated as part of NY 17A, an alternate route of NY 17 between Randolph and Salamanca.[9][10]

In the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, NY 18 was extended northeastward from Buffalo to Rochester while NY 17A was renumbered to NY 17H.[11] The Salamanca–Dayton leg of NY 18 was modified twice in the 1930s. NY 18 initially passed through New Albion on its way from Little Valley to Cattaraugus;[10] however, it was realigned ca. 1934 to follow a more direct alignment between Little Valley and Cattaraugus that bypassed New Albion to the east.[2][12] Meanwhile, the overlap with NY 17H was eliminated ca. 1937 when the NY 17H designation was removed and replaced with an extended NY 242 west of Little Valley.[13][14]

NY 353, meanwhile, was assigned ca. 1933 to the portion of Peck Hill Road between US 62 west of the Dayton hamlet of the same name and NY 39 in Perrysburg.[1][2] When NY 18 was truncated to its current western terminus in Lewiston ca. 1962, NY 353 was extended southeast to Salamanca by way of NY 18's former routing and a short overlap with US 62.[15][16] NY 353 remained unchanged until April 1, 1980, when ownership and maintenance of the original Dayton–Perrysburg segment of NY 353 was transferred from the state of New York to Cattaraugus County as part of a highway maintenance swap between the two levels of government.[17] Following the swap, NY 353 was truncated to what had been the eastern terminus of its overlap with US 62 in Dayton.[18][19] The former routing of NY 353 along Peck Hill Road is now part of County Route 58.[20]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Cattaraugus County.

Location Mile[3] Destinations Notes
City of Salamanca 0.00 NY 417
Town of Little Valley 6.22 NY 242 east Eastern terminus of NY 242 / NY 353 overlap
Village of Little Valley 7.43 NY 242 west Western terminus of NY 242 / NY 353 overlap
Dayton 23.97 US 62
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

NY-blank (cutout).svg New York Roads portal
  1. ^ a b Texas Oil Company (1932). Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  2. ^ a b c Texas Oil Company (1933). Texaco Road Map – New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  3. ^ a b "2008 Traffic Volume Report for New York State" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. June 16, 2009. p. 218. https://www.nysdot.gov/divisions/engineering/technical-services/hds-respository/NYSDOT%20TVR%202008%20by%20Route.pdf. Retrieved February 1, 2010. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f Yahoo! Inc. Yahoo! Maps – overview map of NY 353 (Map). Cartography by NAVTEQ. http://maps.yahoo.com/#mvt=h&lat=42.288155&lon=-78.85954&zoom=12&q1=42.159359%2C-78.742104&q2=42.416918%2C-78.976658. Retrieved December 22, 2010. 
  5. ^ a b "Cattaraugus County Inventory Listing" (CSV). New York State Department of Transportation. March 2, 2010. https://www.nysdot.gov/divisions/engineering/technical-services/hds-repository2/INV_2010-03-02_cattaraugus.csv. Retrieved December 22, 2010. 
  6. ^ United States Geological Survey (1961). Salamanca Quadrangle – New York – Cattaraugus Co. (Map). 1:24,000. 7.5 Minute Series (Topographic). http://www.nysgis.state.ny.us/gisdata/quads/drg24/usgspreview/index.cfm?code=o42078b6. Retrieved December 22, 2010. 
  7. ^ State of New York Department of Highways (1909). The Highway Law. Albany, New York: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 54–55. http://books.google.com/books?id=jZ0AAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA54. Retrieved June 8, 2010. 
  8. ^ New York State Department of Highways (1920). Report of the State Commissioner of Highways. Albany, New York: J. B. Lyon Company. pp. 502–505. http://books.google.com/books?id=Sj4CAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA502. Retrieved June 8, 2010. 
  9. ^ "New York's Main Highways Designated by Numbers". The New York Times: p. XX9. December 21, 1924. 
  10. ^ a b State of New York Department of Public Works (1926). Official Map Showing State Highways and other important roads (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  11. ^ Dickinson, Leon A. (January 12, 1930). "New Signs for State Highways". The New York Times: p. 136. 
  12. ^ Texas Oil Company (1934). Road Map of New York (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  13. ^ Standard Oil Company (1936). New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. 
  14. ^ Standard Oil Company (1937). New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. 
  15. ^ Sunoco (1961). New York and Metropolitan New York (Map). Cartography by H.M. Gousha Company (1961–62 ed.). 
  16. ^ Esso (1962). New York with Sight-Seeing Guide (Map). Cartography by General Drafting. 
  17. ^ New York State Legislature. "New York State Highway Law § 341". http://public.leginfo.state.ny.us/LAWSSEAF.cgi?QUERYTYPE=LAWS+&QUERYDATA=$$HAY341$$@TXHAY0341+&LIST=LAW+&TARGET=VIEW. Retrieved June 8, 2010. 
  18. ^ Exxon (1977). New York (Map). Cartography by General Drafting (1977–78 ed.). 
  19. ^ State of New York (1981). I Love New York Tourism Map (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally and Company. 
  20. ^ Google, Inc. Google Maps – New York State Route 353 (Map). Cartography by Google, Inc. http://maps.google.com/maps?ie=UTF8&ll=42.435303,-78.998737&spn=0.046496,0.111322&z=14. Retrieved April 20, 2008. 

External links


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