Pennsylvania Route 434

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Pennsylvania Route 434
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PA 434 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by PennDOT and JIBC
Length12.471 mi[1] (20.070 km)
Existed1967–present
Major junctions
South endFile:PA-739.svg PA 739 in Lords Valley
Major intersectionsFile:US 6.svg US 6 in Greeley
File:PA-590.svg PA 590 in Greeley
North endFile:NY-55.svg NY 55 / CR 11 in Shohola Township
Location
CountryUnited States
StatePennsylvania
CountiesPike
Highway system
PA 433 PA 435
PA 36File:PA-37.svg PA 38
PA 136File:PA-137 (1926).svg PA 138

Pennsylvania Route 434 (PA 434, designated by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation as SR 0434) is a 12.47-mile-long (20.07 km) state highway located in northeast Pennsylvania. The western terminus of the route is at PA 739 in the Blooming Grove Township community of Lords Valley. The eastern terminus of the route is at the New York-Pennsylvania border in Shohola Township, where PA 434 crosses the Delaware River and enters New York, becoming New York State Route 55 (NY 55) at an intersection with NY 97 in the town of Highland. PA 434 used to be part of PA 37 and PA 137.

Route description

File:2021-09-09 10 08 44 View north along Pennsylvania State Route 434 just north of Knealing Road in Shohola Township, Pike County, Pennsylvania.jpg
PA 434 northbound in Shohola

PA 434 begins at an intersection with PA 739 and State Route 4004 (SR 4004) in Lords Valley, a community in Blooming Grove Township. PA 434 heads to the northeast, passing businesses and homes before leaving the community. The highway then gets into a more scenic rural region, with trees surrounding the highway. PA 434, which makes several curves for the next few miles, passes to the south of a lake. The highway continues on for several miles in this way.[2] A short time later, the highway passes a couple homes and crosses Shohola Creek. Just north of the creek, the area becomes somewhat urbanized with homes beginning to surround the road again. However, this does not last long, with forests returning once more. Just north of the community, PA 434 intersects U.S. Route 6 (US 6). After the intersection with US 6, the surroundings around the highway become a mix of homes and forests. This lasts for much of the distance on PA 434 until Greeley, where it becomes urbanized again. In downtown Greeley, PA 434 splits at an intersection where PA 590 begins. The highway makes a curve, turning to the southeast for a distance north of Greeley. Soon afterwards, PA 434 parallels Shohola Creek, heading northeastward.[2] PA 434 begins to become urbanized for a third time, passing some large buildings along with homes and forests. The creek continues to parallel, with the highway turning in several different directions. The forests begin to recede as PA 434 enters Shohola Township. Twin Lakes Road, a quadrant route, terminates at PA 434 before the route passes under the Southern Tier Line owned by Norfolk Southern and operated by the Central New York Railroad and crosses the Delaware River, where the road becomes NY 55 and Sullivan County Route 11 at the border.[2][lower-alpha 1]

History

In 1928, what is now PA 590 between Lackawaxen and present-day PA 434 in Greeley was designated PA 37.[3] From Greeley, PA 37 continued south along the PA 434 alignment to its southern terminus at US 6.[3] In 1946, PA 37 was removed from the PA 590 alignment.[4][5] While PA 37 occupied the 1.5-mile (2.4 km) segment of modern PA 434 from US 6 to Greeley, a spur of PA 37, PA 137, occupied the remainder of PA 434 from Greeley to the state line from 1928 to 1946. In 1946, however, PA 37 was realigned to follow the entire alignment of PA 434 from US 6 to New York, decommissioning PA 137 in the process.[4] PA 37 remained in existence until 1967 when PA 37 was replaced by PA 434.[6] In 2004, PA 434 was extended from its southern terminus down to an intersection with PA 739 in Lords Valley.[7][8] PA 434 shared a brief 0.1-mile (0.16 km) concurrency with US 6 after its extension to PA 739 was created. A new unsignalized intersection was built between 2005 and 2008 eliminating this concurrency.

Major intersections

The entire route is in Pike County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Blooming Grove Township0.0000.000SR 4004 (Blooming Grove Road) – Blooming GroveContinuation beyond PA 739; eastern terminus of SR 4004
File:PA-739.svgFile:To plate blue.svg
File:I-84.svg
PA 739 to I-84 – Dingmans Ferry, Hawley
Western terminus
Shohola Township3.8846.251File:US 6.svg US 6 – Hawley, Milford
Greeley7.89612.707File:West plate.svg
File:PA-590.svg
PA 590 west – Lackawaxen, Rowland
Eastern terminus of PA 590
Delaware River12.47120.070Barryville–Shohola Bridge
12.47120.070File:East plate.svg
File:NY-55.svg
File:To plate.svg
File:NY-97.svg
NY 55 east / CR 11 east to NY 97 – Barryville
Western terminus of NY 55 and Sullivan CR 11[lower-alpha 1]
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 The actual northern terminus of PA 434 is at the New York–Pennsylvania border in the middle of the Delaware River, roughly 400 yards (370 m) from where its locally-maintained continuation into New York intersects NY 97 and NY 55.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bureau of Maintenance and Operations (January 2015). Roadway Management System Straight Line Diagrams (Report) (2015 ed.). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 30, 2015.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Microsoft; Nokia. "Overview map of PA 434" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved October 28, 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Map Showing Pennsylvania State Highways (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1928.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Pennsylvania Official Road Map (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1946.
  5. Pennsylvania Official Road Map (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1947.
  6. Pennsylvania (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1967.
  7. Pennsylvania (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. 2003.
  8. Pennsylvania (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Transportation. 2004.

External links

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