Cohoes
Colonie
Green Island
Troy
Waterford
Watervliet
Cohoes
The
dominant landmark in the City of Cohoes, The Spindle City, is the
86-foot Cohoes Falls, the second most powerful waterfall east of the
Mississippi. The Harmony Mills were the largest textile mills in the world when
constructed, and the mills and the canal that powered them were an industrial
marvel studied by engineers all over the world. Cohoes was known as a typical
"company town" by the end of the Civil War, as every mill in Cohoes was under
the ownership of the Harmony Company, whereas each of the other cities had a
wide variety of owners of manufacturing companies. Also, the Harmony Company
alone provided employee housing, some of which stand today.
Colonie
During the Civil War,
Colonie was widely known across the country as West Albany. It was known at one
time as the "Wild West of the East," as its stockyards were the largest between
Chicago and the Atlantic Ocean. The Erie Canal opened in Colonie in 1825. A
series of locks from Maplewood on the Hudson River through Cohoes to Colonie
lifted the river barges the greatest elevation of any system of locks along the
entire 300-plus mile length of the Erie Canal. The first passenger train in
America ran through Colonie in 1831 on its epic 18-mile journey from Albany to
Schenectady along the rails of the Mohawk and Hudson River Railroad. By 1854
the New York Central Railroad purchased 350 acres of land which grew into the
West Albany shops, a major repair center for the New York Central Railroad,
employing as many as 2000 people.
Green Island
Industries on Green Island has long centered on transportation and related
businesses. To keep up with changing times, the Eaton Gilbert & Company
converted to the manufacture of ornate railroad passenger cars in the 1850's.
Near by, the Delaware and Hudson Railroad bought the Rensselaer & Saratoga
Railroad shops and used them a major locomotive repair center until a larger
faculty was built in Colonie. Across the street, Henry Ford built a radiator
and spring factory powered by a new dam on the Hudson. The coach factory,
railroad shops, Ford factory and a New York Central freight house still stand
today and most are still used by other industries.
Troy
Troy was a major
transportation hub at the beginning of the industrial revolution. Local iron
works, shipped horseshoes, railroad rails, spikes, rivets around the world. The
invention of the detachable collar in Troy started the city's textile industry.
By 1840 Troy was had the forth highest per capita income in America. When fire
destroyed most of the city in 1863, the citizens rebuilt in under a year,
producing Troy's uniform architecture. As a high tech area of the industrial
age, the need for scientists created the need for educational institutions.
Rensselaer became a premier engineering university, while the Sage and Emma
Willard Schools were at the forefront of women's education.
Waterford
First settled in the 1630s,
Waterford is located where the Mohawk River enters into the northern most
navigable point on the Hudson. The settlement was laid out in May 1783, on the
former site of Half Moon Point. The village flourished as a river port in the
late 1700s with flour mills and barrel making firms. It became a bustling canal
town with the completion of the Champlain and Eire canals in 1823. It continues
to be closely linked with the canals today, including the third branch of the
Erie Canal, now part of the New York State Barge Canal. Nearby are preserved
sections of the historic Eire and Champlain canals. The village of Waterford is
the oldest incorporated village in the state of New York (chartered in 1794).
Watervliet
Known for many years as West Troy, the history of Watervliet is closely linked
with the development of the U.S. Arsenal, first established in 1813. Presently,
the Arsenal located there is the only cannon factory in the nation. The Erie
Canal sidecut also brought businesses and materials to the area, while other
local industries gained international reputations for the quality of the
products. The Jones Car Works began to manufacture carriages and in 1859. It
shipped hundreds of lumber and express wagons to California during the gold
rush of 1848, but by 1880 the firm was near bankruptcy. It turned to making new
electric trolley cars and soon had a global reputation for quality and
efficiency. In a single order, the firm shipped 600 trolley cars to Bombay
Tramway Company in India. Others went to Canada, South America, Europe and
Asia.
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The RiverSpark Heritage Area is composed of seven municipalities:
Cohoes, Colonie, Green Island, Town of Waterford, Village of Waterford,
Watervliet and Troy. Currently headquartered in Troy’s RiverSpark
Visitor Center, 251 River St, Troy, NY 12180. 518-270-8667 /
info@riverspark.org.
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