County Route 106 (Rockland County, New York)

CR 106 in Orange County was decommissioned on January 1, 2014, when maintenance was transferred to the Palisades Interstate Park Commission.

CR 106 then begins its trek out of Harriman State Park and into the town of Stony Point.

[1] CR 106 originated in 1824, when the road was chartered for the New Turnpike and headed from Monroe to Haverstraw.

The New Turnpike started at a nail factory in Monroe to a crossing over the Ramapo River, and progressed eastward, passing Lake Stahahe (then known as Car Pond).

At the fork, part of the road became NY 210 in the 1930 New York State Route renumbering.

After a bridge was built to cross a river in 1923, a new route, making up part of the original Warwick Turnpike, became NY 17A.

CR 106 begins here in Stony Point, and heads west providing an intersection with the Palisades Parkway.
CR 106's western terminus at the Rockland/Orange County line.
A few NY 210 shields still stand in Rockland County on side roads approaching CR 106.