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The four lane boulevard crosses into Argyle Park, crossing under the Long Island Rail Road Babylon Branch and into an intersection with CR 12 (South Railroad Avenue). NY 109 bends southward through Argyle Park, remaining four lanes into Deer Park, where it meets an intersection with NY 27A (West Main Street), the eastern terminus of NY 109. [4]
A freight house was erected by the railroad in either April or May 1874 but the station was closed on June 1, 1876. The station was reopened by the Long Island Railroad in June 1936 with a sheltered platform for a stop named "South Farmingdale." [3] [4]
The road intersects an at-grade crossing with the Central Branch of the Long Island Rail Road. From there the road crosses NY 109 and meets the Southern State Parkway. As CR 2 approaches the interchange with the parkway, the road becomes narrower despite remaining four lanes wide.
CR 50 begins at the intersection of New York State Route 109 in the village of Babylon, north of the Montauk Branch of the Long Island Rail Road as Park Avenue. The route straddles northward on Deer Park Avenue for three-tenths of a mile to find its way onto Simon Street but this name doesn't carry the designation very long.
Roughly in the vicinity of the NY 109–NY 110 interchange today. Breslau: East of Wellwood Ave, North Lindenhurst, NY Breslau was also a former name for Lindenhurst on what is today the Babylon Branch of the Long Island Rail Road. LIRR may have had a stop here after 1925 called "North Lindenhurst". Belmont Junction: Babylon
New Jersey and New York Railroad: New York and Albany Railroad: NYC: 1832 1846 New York and Harlem Railroad: New York and Atlantic Railway: 1880 1887 West Brooklyn Railroad: New York, Auburn and Lansing Railroad: 1900 1914 Central New York Southern Railroad: New York Bay Extension Railroad: LI: 1892 1902 Long Island Rail Road: New York, Bay ...
Hastings-on-Hudson has had railroad service from as far back as the 1840s, pre-dating the Hudson River Railroad, [3] and served both passengers and a local sugar refinery. . In 1875, a major fire destroyed the waterfront, and the company running the sugar refinery left town, but other industries ended up taking its pla
The New York, Susquehanna and Western Railway (reporting mark NYSW), also referred to as the Susie-Q or the Susquehanna, and formerly referred to as the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad, is an American Class II freight railway that operates over 400 miles (640 km) of trackage in the states of New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.