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New York State Route 267

New York State Route 267 marker

New York State Route 267
Map of the Buffalo area with NY 267 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NYSDOT, the Tonawanda Band of Seneca Indians, and the town of Alabama
Length: 7.1 mi (11.4 km)
Existed: c. 1935 – August 14, 1980
Major junctions
West end: NY 93 in Akron
East end: NY 77 in Alabama
Location
Counties: Erie, Genesee
Highway system
NY 266 NY 268
NY 77 NY 77A I-78

New York State Route 267 marker

New York State Route 267 (NY 267) was an east–west state highway in the western portion of New York in the United States. It extended for 7.16 miles (11.52 km) from an intersection with NY 93 in the Erie County village of Akron to a junction with NY 77 in the Genesee County hamlet of Basom. Part of NY 267 in Genesee County passed through the Tonawanda Indian Reservation. The portion of NY 267 within Erie County was assigned c. 1935. NY 267 was extended east to NY 77 in Basom in the late 1930s, replacing New York State Route 77A, a spur leading from NY 77 to the eastern edge of the Tonawanda Reservation. The Erie County segment of the route was transferred from the state of New York to Erie County in April 1980, leading to the total removal of the NY 267 designation in August of that year.

NY 267 began at an intersection with NY 93 in the village of Akron in eastern Erie County. The route headed eastward, following John Street through downtown Akron. NY 267 broke from John Street just four blocks later. While the street continued east to serve Akron Airport, the route turned northeast to follow Bloomingdale Road out of the village. The route continued through gradually less developed areas of the town of Newstead, intersecting with County Route 250 (CR 250, named Scotland Road). NY 267 crossed into Genesee County soon afterward.


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Wikipedia

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