Greenwood Road

United States Migration  Trails and Roads  Connecticut  Massachusetts  New York  Greenwood Road

Did an ancestor travel the Greenwood Road of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New York? Learn about this settler migration route, its transportation history, and find related genealogy sources.

History
The Greenwood Road, also known as the Greenwoods Turnpike, was chartered by the Connecticut legislature in October 1798. In Massachusetts it was also called the Twelfth Massachusetts Turnpike and sometimes locally the Litchfield Turnpike. It connected to the Hudson Turnpike in New York State bound for Albany.

Route
Starts from Hartford, Connecticut. Runs northwest through Winsted, Norfolk, and North Canaan, then north into Massachusetts along the east side of the Housatonic River to Great Barrington, from there to Pittsfield, and then over the hills northwest into the corner of Columbia County, New York, and from there northwest to the city of Albany. Today it is parallel to US Route 44, U.S. Route 7, and U.S. Route 20.

Settler Records
No list is known to exist of migrating citizens who used the Greenwood Road and decided to settle along it. However, many of the earliest settlers in the area would have used this road to reach their new home. The Greenwood Road would have attracted nearby settlers because it helped them reach markets for buying and selling goods and services. Therefore, the land, tax records, and histories of the earliest settlers along the route would list the names of people likely to have used the Greenwood Road.