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Penn Yan is an incorporated village and the county seat of Yates County, New York, United States. The population was 5,159 at the 2010 census. [ 2 ] It lies at the north end of the east branch of Keuka Lake , one of the Finger Lakes .
A second East Lake Road serves as the local residential highway for a short distance, until the hamlet of Crosby. In Crosby, NY 54 becomes a two-lane residential street until the intersection with Gray Road. There, East Lake Road continues a new parallel once again. A short distance later, NY 54 crosses the town line from Barrington into Milo ...
The alignments of NY 54 and NY 54A between Hammondsport and Penn Yan were flipped in the early 1940s, placing NY 54A on its current alignment. [7] [8] After deteriorating for many years, the 5-mile (8 km) portion of NY 54A between Penn Yan and Branchport underwent a $5.2 million rehabilitation during the summer of 2010. This work was done after ...
On February 5, 1823, Yates County was formed from 310 square miles (800 km 2) of Ontario County, including the area that included Vine Valley, Middlesex, Penn Yan, and Dresden, New York. [4] On January 1, 1826, 60 square miles (160 km 2) of Steuben County was partitioned and added to Yates, which included Starkey, Dundee, and Lakemont, New York ...
New York State Route 364 (NY 364) is a state highway located in the Finger Lakes region of New York in the United States. It extends for 24.59 miles (39.57 km) from an intersection with NY 14A in Penn Yan to a junction with the concurrent routes of U.S. Route 20 (US 20) and NY 5 just east of the Canandaigua city limits.
Penn Yan Historic District is a national historic district located at Penn Yan in Yates County, New York. The district consists of 65 acres (26 ha) and contains 281 structures, 210 of which are contributing. It includes a broad range of architecturally significant resources that document the village's development from the 1820s to 1929.
The Crooked Lake Canal ran under 8 miles [2] between Dresden on the west shore of Seneca Lake and Penn Yan at the northeast end of Keuka Lake, through a system of twenty-eight locks. By contrast, the entire Erie Canal (360 miles) had 90 locks at this time. The drop between Keuka Lake and Seneca Lake was a steep 270 feet. The final cost was ...
The Crooked Lake Review. —— (June 1989). "Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake". The Crooked Lake Review. I. —— (March 1990). "Along the Outlet of Keuka Lake". The Crooked Lake Review. II. MacAlpine, Richard S.; Mitchell, Charles R. (2015). Steamboats on Keuka Lake:: Penn Yan, Hammondsport and the Heart of the Finger Lakes. Arcadia Publishing.