Designations from 1913 to the 1930s |alt=A relatively small steel bridge seen from the side. In 1913, the
New York State Legislature designated most of modern NY 74 as Route 22-b, an unsigned
legislative route. It ran for from Route 22 (now
US 9) in
Schroon to the western edge of the then-
village of Ticonderoga. On March 1, 1921, Route 22-b became part of Route 48, a new route created as part of a partial renumbering of New York's legislative route system. In 1924, when state highways were first publicly signed with route numbers, the highway from Schroon to Ticonderoga remained unnumbered. During the
1930 renumbering of state highways in New York, the segment of modern NY 74 between
US 9 in
Schroon and NY 22 in
Ticonderoga was designated as part of
NY 73, a route extending from
NY 28N in
Tahawus to Ticonderoga. NY 73 followed the
Blue Ridge Road from Tahawus to
North Hudson and had an
overlap with US 9 from North Hudson to Schroon. The portion of NY 73 between Tahawus and
North Hudson was removed from the state highway system . As a result, NY 73 was truncated to a new western terminus at US 9 in Schroon, eliminating the concurrency with US 9. The Blue Ridge Road is now designated as
CR 84 from NY 28N in Tawahus to the
Adirondack Northway in North Hudson, and as NY 910K, a short unsigned
reference route, from the Northway to US 9. On the Vermont side, the road connecting Larrabees Point to the main north–south highways in the area was designated as VT F-9 by 1926. VT F-9 began at the ferry landing at Larrabees Point and continued northeast to Shoreham Center, where it briefly overlapped with then-VT 30A (modern
VT 22A). Past VT 30A, VT F-9 continued east along what are now town highways through
Whiting to
Leicester, where it ended at a junction with
US 7. At the time, modern VT 74 between Shoreham and Cornwall centers was known as VT F-9A while what is now
VT 73 from Larrabees Point to Brown Lane north of the town center of
Orwell was part of
VT F-10A.
Changes from 1933 onward By 1933, the highway linking NY 22 in Ticonderoga to the ferry for Larrabees Point became part of
NY 8. NY 8 was realigned to follow
NY 22 north from Ticonderoga to
Crown Point, where it left NY 22 to follow
NY 347 (modern
NY 185) to the
Champlain Bridge. The NY 347 designation was reassigned to NY 8's former routing between NY 22 and the ferry landing east of Ticonderoga. VT F-9, meanwhile, was extended southward to Orwell over VT F-10A by 1938. Like VT F-10A, it initially bypassed Orwell to the north on Brown Lane; however, it was realigned in the late 1930s to follow modern VT 73 into Orwell. Around the same time, VT F-9 was realigned east of Shoreham to follow VT F-9A northeast to Cornwall. The VT F-9A designation was eliminated while the former routing of VT F-9 between Shoreham and Leicester became unnumbered. In November 1952, New York extended NY 73 east to the ferry landing by way of NY 347 and Wicker and Montcalm Streets. Vermont renumbered the Larrabees Point–Orwell section of VT F-9 to VT 73 in 1954 in order to match the New York route number. At the same time, the Larrabees Point–Cornwall section of VT F-9 was renumbered by Vermont to VT 74. NY 73 was truncated to its current eastern terminus in
Underwood on July 1, 1972, eliminating a lengthy
overlap with US 9, while its former routing from Schroon to Lake Champlain was renumbered to NY 74, matching the other Vermont route number that ends in Larrabees Point. The
already existing NY 74 in Chautauqua County (in the
Jamestown area) was renumbered to
NY 474 as a result. By 1981, NY 74 was rerouted to follow its current alignment around the northeastern edge of Ticonderoga, on a concurrency with NY 22. The highway has remained the same since that date. The New York State Department of Transportation has announced a project to repave NY 74 from Chilson to Paradox. The project is in preliminary development, with construction is expected to begin in early 2013 and reach completion about a year later. Funding will come from state sources and run an estimated cost of $8.6 million. ==Ferry history==