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White River Light Station Museum

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White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
White River Light Station Museum
Phone:
+1 231-894-8265

Hours:
Sunday11am - 4pm
Monday11am - 4pm
Tuesday11am - 4pm
Wednesday11am - 4pm
Thursday11am - 4pm
Friday11am - 4pm
Saturday11am - 4pm


New York State Route 22 is a north–south state highway that parallels the eastern border of the U.S. state of New York, from the outskirts of New York City to the hamlet of Mooers in Clinton County near the Canadian border. At 337 miles , it is the state's longest north–south route and the third longest state route overall, after NY 5 and NY 17. Many of the state's major east–west roads intersect with, and often join, Route 22 just before crossing into the neighboring New England states, where U.S. Route 7 , which originally partially followed NY 22's alignment, similarly parallels the New York state line. Almost all of Route 22 is a two-lane rural road through small villages and hamlets. The exceptions are its southern end in the heavily populated Bronx and lower Westchester County, and a section that runs through the city of Plattsburgh near the northern end. The rural landscape that the road passes through varies from horse country and views of the reservoirs of the New York City watershed in the northern suburbs of the city, to dairy farms further upstate in the Taconic and Berkshire mountains, to the undeveloped, heavily forested Adirondack Park along the shores of Lake Champlain. An 86-mile section from Fort Ann to Keeseville is part of the All-American Road known as the Lakes to Locks Passage. The oldest portions of today's Route 22, in Westchester County and along the Lake Champlain shoreline, were Native American trails. Dutch, and after them English, settlers continued to use the road to get their farm products to market, with the southernmost portion eventually becoming the White Plains Post Road in the 18th and 19th centuries. In the early 20th century, as automobile use became widespread, the state paved the more heavily used sections and built new roads to create the current highway, first designated as Route 22 in 1930. In its early years the highway began in Manhattan; until 2008 its northern end was the Canadian border.
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