The road went up Northern Drive, and Oil Mill Hill and Brickyard Road, then up to Route 40. Imagine if northern Drive did not bend right before Oil Mill Hill and went straight up the hill at even level with the train tracks which would be built at a later time. [Note that these train tracks eventually became an overpass] It followed Route 40 up to Grants Hollow where the turnpike did go through Grant's Hollow. The road continued to Melrose and went on Melrose-Valley Falls road. This was previously designated as County Rt 5 and NY Rt 40a. It crossed the Tomhannock Reservoir, when it was just the Tomhannock Creek at what was a covered bridge. Then it went thru the hamlet of Tomhannock. It went to Miller's Corners and onto NY Route 67. It followed Rt 67 except for a small detour onto Hunt Road where you can't get back onto Rt 67 as it goes through what is now someone's residence. The road then went on to the Buskirk Covered Bridge. On this section of Rt 67, the turnpike followed the same route except for a slight variation off onto another road. It then crossed the bridge and went up a hill on Stage Rd, which is still a dirt road and made its way to Cambridge. After Cambridge, it presumably followed Old Rt 22 Road. Near Lake Lauderdale, it stopped following Rt 22 for a bit as evidenced by a mile marker on Ackley Road. Where Rt 22 currently crosses the Battenkill Creek, there previously was a covered bridge called the Old Red Bridge. It passed through Salem and made its way up to Granville on Rt 22.
The best places to see what the road might have looked like when it was a toll road would be Stage Road, from the Buskirk Covered Bridge and Hunt Road. At each mile, there was a marker on how many miles until Lanfingburgh. At the time, 's' was written as a fancy 'f' and in much writings, it came out to look like a 'f'. Here is my list of the 50 markers and which are left standing and whatnot. Now includes pictures of some milestones.
May 20th, 1801 - Lansingbrugh Gazette
The Directors of the First Northern Turnpike Road, leading from
Lansingburgh, in the county of Rensselaer, to Granville, in the county of
Washington, a distance of more than fifty miles, will be ready to
commence working said road by the fifth day of June next - Any persons
desiring to contract for any part of said road, which may be surveyed this
season, may make application to the Directors in Lansingburgh, by said day.
June 16th 1801 - Lansingburgh Gazette
NORTHERN TURNPIKE ROAD
Ten miles of this road are already surveyed, and a contract entered into for
working it this summer. The contractors are men of industry and enterprise, and
are well acquainted with their business. The Directors are at present exploring
and surveying a further ten miles of the road, which, we understand will also be
completed during the season. Perhaps no turnpike in the state, will, in
proportion to its extent, be of greater utility to the public, or more
productive to its proprietors. It will be the through-fare through which the
produce of the northern part of this state, and the principal part of the
western district of Vermont, must come to market, and the soil over which it is
to pass, is in general well calculated for constructing it and rendering it
durable. The stock is nearly all taken up - about one hundred shares only
remaining unsubscribed.
March 8, 1802 Lansingburgh Gazette
NORTHERN TURNPIKE ROAD
Will be received by the Subscribers, until the first day day of April next,
for working the road from the house of Mr. EWarner, south of John Younglove, in
the town of Cambridge, to the Court-House, in the town of Salem, to be
completed by the first day of September next. All persons wishing to contract,
will send in their Proposals, in writing, previous to the said first day of
April next.
PROPOSALS will also be received for
building a BRIDGE across Batten-Kill, on said Turnpike road to be a firm,
substantial, well built Bridge, twenty-four feet wide, and covered with three
inch pine plank, and completed by the said first day of September next.
JOS. ALEXANDER, at Lansingburgh.
ABNER STONE, \
JAMES HARVEY, / at Salem.
April 16, 1802 Lansingburgh Gazette
June 16, 1802 Lansingburgh Gazette
PROPOSALS
Will be received, by JACOB A. FORT, one of the Subscribers, until the first day
of July next, for building a BRIDGE over the Hosick Rover, north of
Abraham Lake's house, to be completed by the first day of November next. A
plan of the Bridge may be seen, by applying to the said Jacob, at his house in
the town of Hosick.
A Paragraph from the Hebron, NY history book. 'The First Northern Turnpike of 1799, which generally followed the route of State highway 22, was important as a route to the outside world until the Rutland Railroad was built in 1852. Although located east of Hebron in Vermont, the railroad generally paralled the turnpike and in time put it out of business.'