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SR 55 southbound at I-405 interchange in Costa Mesa. SR 55 was built in 1931 and originally numbered Route 43. It was built from the southern terminus of SR 1 (the Pacific Coast Highway, or "PCH") and continued northbound on roughly the same route it follows today, [10] following Newport Road (today Newport Boulevard) northeast to Tustin, and then Tustin Avenue north to near its current ...
Gardiner is a hamlet (and a census-designated place) in Ulster County, New York, United States. The population was 952 at the 2020 census . The community is near the center of the Town of Gardiner on routes 44 and 55 .
To ensure safe purchases, cyber safety network Gen, which owns and operates Norton and LifeLock brands, recommends users follow their seven self-protection tips when using Facebook Marketplace or ...
At the junction with US 209, NY 55 becomes concurrent with the U.S. route northeast through Wawarsing, bypassing the hamlet of Napanoch and crossing a junction with CR 128 (Plank Road / Institution Road). CR 128 connects to two local New York State Department of Corrections facilities. [4] View of Catskills from Routes 44/55 in Shawangunks
Assault rifles and counterfeit oxycodone pills similar to the ones recovered in the drug and gun takedown announced by Attorney General Letitia James at New York State Police Troop K off of Route ...
The Trapps historic district contains about 433 acres centered along the US 44/NY 55 highway and the Coxing Kill atop the Shawangunk in the northwestern portion of Gardiner, with some portions overlapping into neighboring Rochester. Most of that area is now reforested, part of the Mohonk Preserve or Minnewaska State Park Preserve, or privately ...
Gardiner was created from parts of New Paltz, Rochester, and Denning by an act of the New York State Legislature on April 2, 1853. The first town meeting was on May 17, 1853. [4] It was named for Lieutenant Governor Addison Gardiner. [5] [6] In 1925, a large fire destroyed a large part of Gardiner village. Wallkill Valley Rail Trail Crossing on ...
The Gardiner section was in such a state of disrepair in 2004 that the Wallkill Valley Land Trust almost closed it. [29] Gardiner received a $100,000 grant from the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation in December 2006, [30] and the purchase was completed in 2007. [27]