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Straight roads are common of course; but not many can boast the amount of history thats behind these two that cross the Erie Canal in Western New York State.
Tags:
Ellicott
Holland
Land
Company
Transit
Erie
Canal
Added: 3rd September 2007
Views: 199
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Posted By: Lowbridge |

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Located near the intersection of Ellicott and Main Streets in Batavia, this building was the headquarters for the management of Western New York State when it was still a wilderness frontier. Today the building houses a museum open to the public.
Tags:
holland
land
ellicott
batavia
Added: 28th August 2007
Views: 143
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Posted By: Lowbridge |

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This marker is located in Gaines on historic Ridge Road (State Rt 104) near the intersection of today's Route 279. Gaines was once a dominant community in this region, but when the Erie Canal's route was surveyed three miles south of Gaines in the early 1820s, the village of Albion (then Newport) quickly grew there to become the larger village. Hoping for comments by those who know more about this academy.
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academy
ridge
oak
orchard
gaines
1830
Added: 13th September 2007
Views: 83
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Posted By: sdado4 |

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The marker is located about a mile east of Leroy on the north side of Route 5 in Western New York State
Tags:
first
school
western
new
york
Added: 1st October 2007
Views: 94
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Posted By: MarkHoward |

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3 Duanesburg Markers
These three markers are located in front of the Christ Episcopal Church at the intersection of Duanesburg Churches Road and the Great Western Turnpike (US Route 20) in Duanesburg, New York.
WILLIAM NORTH
Born 1755 Buried Here 1836
Aide to Steuben in 1779
General in U.S. Army
Son In Law of James Duane
Assemblyman and Speaker
State Education Department 1932
William North (1755 - January 3, 1836) was a United States Senator representing the state of New York. North was born in Fort Frederick, Pemaquid (part of Bristol, Maine), in 1755, where he attended the common schools. He moved with his mother to Boston, Massachusetts and served in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. After the war he settled in Duanesburg, New York. He married Mary Duane, daughter of James Duane, on October 14, 1787 and had six children. He was elected to the New York State Assembly several times. North was appointed as a Federalist to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John Sloss Hobart and served from May 5, 1798 to August 17, 1798, when a successor was elected and qualified. He was appointed adjutant general of the Army with the rank of Brigadier General 1798-1800. He was a member and speaker of the State assembly in 1810. He died in Duanesburg, New York and is interred in the crypt under Christ Episcopal Church.
JAMES DUANE
Born 1732 Buried Here 1797
In Continental Congress
Provincial Convention
Mayor of New York, State
Senator, Federal Judge
State Education Department 1932
After his parents died, young James Duane (b Feb. 6, 1733 [date does not match that on the marker]; d Feb 1, 1797) became the ward of Robert Livingston, who was known as the 3rd Lord of the Manor. He completed his early education at Livingston Manor, then read law in the offices of James Alexander. He was admitted to the bar in 1754. Then in 1759, James married Maria Livingston, the eldest daughter of his former guardian Robert. He was Clerk of the Chancery Court of New York in 1762, State Attorney General in 1767 and Indian commissioner for the Colony of New York in 1774. During the American Revolution When the British occupied New York City in 1776, he was forced from his home. He withdrew his wife and family to the relative safety of her father's home at Livingston Manor on the Hudson. Duane served in the New York state Senate from 1783 to 1790. He first became the Mayor of New York City by appointment in 1784, serving until 1789. He was a delegate to the New York convention that ratified the Federal Constitution. In 1789, President Washington named him the first judge of the United States District Court for New York.
As Duane established an extensive and profitable law practice he acquired by purchase and inheritance the 50,000 acres of wilderness that is his namesake, the Town of Duanesburg (NY). Duane's early attempts to settle these lands were thwarted by agents of Sir William Johnson who circulated unfavorable reports about the land, as they were attempting to develop Johnson's holdings. Later Duane succeeded in contracting with 16 German families to begin farming/renting the land. Duane had plans to make Duanesburg the capitol of New York, but the citizens of Albany had other and more compelling ideas. Duane never lived in Duanesburg where he had already built the Christ Episcopal Church and had just begun to build a home on his estate when he died in Schenectady, New York. He is buried in the crypt beneath the Christ Episcopal Church in Duanesburg.
CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Built 1732 Consecrated 1793
By Bishop Samuel Provoost
A Glebe of 80 Acres Presented
By James Duane for Rectory
State Education Department 1932
After the retirement of Judge James Duane, one of his first thoughts was for a church, "Cemetery Lot" or "Square", having failed to become the head of Duanesburg village, he dedicated it to the uses of the church, and in its center he built the present house of worship. At a meeting of the rector and inhabitants of the town of Duanesburg on Tuesday, September 22, 1783, Judge James Duane, conveyed the church and the ground on which it is erected for the public worship of Almighty God according to the rites and sacraments of the Protestant Episcopal Church. The church was admitted to the Diocese of New York in 1789. The parish had a difficult existence for some years previous to 1795. In 1811 a tower and spire was added to the building and a few changes were made in the interior.
The Christ Episcopal Church has been documented in the Historic American Building Survey
Christ Episcopal Church
Duanesbsurg, New York
Tags:
Duanesburg
James
Duane
William
North
Christ
Church
Episcopal
Historic
Marker
Added: 23rd October 2007
Views: 292
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Posted By: Ohlhous |

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At the time of the Revolution, America inherited claims to vast tracts of western lands; but owning and keeping were two different things! Our young nation desperately needed to establish trade routes across the formidable Appalachian mountain chain. Other efforts failed, but here in New York State the Erie Canal succeeded, and perhaps the one most important reason for its success can be seen here. The noses refer to the two parts of the mountain that was cut in two by the Mohawk River's flow many thousands of years before the white man ever came to this continent. This site, which is just a few miles east of Canajoharie, was the only gap in the Appalachian chain through which a canal could be successfully constructed.
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Noses
Mohawk
Adrirondack
Erie
Canal
Added: 4th November 2007
Views: 184
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Posted By: Lowbridge |

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The inventor of the Pullman railroad car got his start in Western New York State moving barges that had become stranded in the Erie Canal.
Tags:
pullman
erie
canal
albion
ny
Added: 7th November 2007
Views: 90
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Posted By: Lowbridge |

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