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Lawrence...the Christian
Mohawk Indian who helped rescue Schenectady
Massacre hostages from Canada and encouraged the Dutch settlers
to rebuild after the 1690 massacre.
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Stockade
history
SUMMARY
The Stockade Historic District is
the oldest residential neighborhood in the country.
It is home to what the
National Parks Service
called "the highest concentration of historic period
homes in the country," with over 40 homes
over 200 years old. It is the first Historic District
established in New York.
Settled in 1661 by a
group of enterprising Dutch merchants and fur-traders,
the settlement flourished until 1690 when a party of
French-Canadian and Indian marauders burnt the stockaded
village to the ground, massacred most of its inhabitants
and marched 27 prisoners back to Quebec. Native
Mohawks, including "Lawrence the Indian," encouraged the
hearty Dutch to resettle; by 1692, the Stockade area was
once again a flourishing fur-trading outpost and a
thriving industrial and commercial center marked by
sturdy homes of local merchants, laborers and farmers of
Dutch, English, and Scots heritage.
The Stockade saw one of the first calls for liberty
in 1765 and was the area's center for the Committees on
Safety. During the revolution the Stockade became a
crucial link in the line of supplies for the
Revolutionary effort providing provisions, bateaux and
arms to the continental army. George Washington
visited several times during and after the Revolutionary
War.
Union College traces its beginnings to 1779, when
several hundred residents began the first popular
demand for higher education in America. These
residents pursued that dream for 16 years until, in
1795, Union became the first college chartered by the
Regents of the State of New York. Originally
located in the Stockade , the college moved to its
present location, 1/2 mile to the east, in 1814. Designed by the renowned
classical landscape architect Joseph Jacques Ramee,
Union College was the
first planned campus in America predating the famous
University of Virginia designed by Thomas Jefferson in
1817-22. Since its inception, the college has been
recognized as a national, even international, leader in
non-denominational, liberal arts education. Some
of the original college buildings have survived on
College Street.
The 18th Century
brought prosperity to the area. Many businesses,
warehouses and wharves were built along the Binne Kill
to service the traffic which moved up and down the
Mohawk River. This was the principal route used to
settle the Midwest and caused Schenectady to receive the
appellation "Gateway to the West".
In 1819 a
devastating fire destroyed most of the commercial
establishments along with many houses on nearby
Washington Avenue. A total of 200 buildings were
lost. The description of the properties lost from
contemporary newspapers inspired L. F.Tantillo's
painting "Schenectady
Harbor."
As a result of the
fire, and the opening of the ERIE Canal, the
commercial district relocated approximately
1/2 mile east to be nearer the canal. This left the
Stockade area mainly residential, and saved
it from being demolished in the name of progress. |
Stockade History Details
The Early Years:
A little more
than thirteen thousand years ago, there was a catastrophic
draining of the pre-historic Great Lakes that created the wide
and fertile Mohawk Valley. This valley is the only water route
though the Appalachian mountain range. Thus, for many thousands
of years this valley has been an important trade route. The
Stockade sits near the eastern terminus of the valley about 8
miles from where the river drains into the Hudson River. The
Mohawk river west of the Stockade was navigable by canoe
and flat bottom boat all the way to the Great lakes. East of
Schenectady, the river flowed through a series of gorges and
over several cataracts. The western and central portions of the
valley were under the control of the Iroquois Indian nation. The
eastern portion was controlled by the Mahicans (Mohicans),
who were part of the Algonquin group of tribes.
In 1609, Henry
Hudson, an English navigator, in the service of the Dutch
East India Company, discovered the river that is now called by
his name. Sailing up this river for about 150 miles, he took
possession of the country in the name of the States-General of
Holland. To the territory which they had thus acquired the Dutch
gave the name of New Netherlands. In 1613 they erected a few
buildings on Manhattan Island, where New York city now stands.
In 1614 they built a fort and storehouse on a little island just
below Albany, and in 1623 they built Fort Orange on the site
where the city of Albany now stands.
In 1621 the Dutch
West India Company was chartered by the States-General of
Holland, and invested with almost absolute authority over the
New Netherlands. At first, as their only object was trade, they
made no effort to acquire possession of land, but afterward they
concluded to attempt a more permanent occupation. For the
purpose of encouraging colonization, the company gave to any of
its members who would buy land from the Indians and form a
colony of fifty persons nearly absolute control of such land and
the colonists. These owners were called patroons, and they
acquired very extensive landed property. One of them, Killian
Van Rensselaer, owned a tract of land containing over 700,000
acres, including all of the present county of Albany and the
greater part of the counties of Rensselaer and Columbia., This
large estate was named Rensselaerwyck, and the name of
Beaverwyck was applied to the district, or hamlet, which
included Fort Orange (Albany). Van Rensselaer did not come over
to America, but entrusted the care of his colony to a relative, Arendt Van
Curler (or Corlaer), who came to this country in 1630, and under
whose able management the colony prospered.
In 1646, the
Patroon, Killian Van Rensselaer died, leaving his colony in the
hands of his son. Van Curler, then recently married, having
obtained a farm in Rensselaerwyck, settled down in private life.
But he retained a liberal public spirit. Many of the
settlers near Fort Orange were restive under the restrictions
imposed upon them by the Patroon. They wished to hold their
lands, not by a feudal tenure, but in fee simple, or absolute
possession. This desire Van Curler shared with them.
In June, 1661, he
with fourteen others applied to Governor Stuyvesant for
permission to purchase from the Indians the "Great Flat," a
tract of land on the lower Mohawk, including the present site of
the Stockade. Permission was obtained and the land was bought in
the following month. The description given in the deed was
somewhat indefinite, but the area comprised was comparatively
small. The right of trading with the Indians was not granted
till 1672, so that at first the settlers were restricted to
agriculture.
The land thus
acquired was divided among the original 14 proprietors by giving
to each of them a house lot in the village, a farm on the Great
Flat or on the islands, a pasture-ground east of the village,
and a garden-lot on the west, near the Binne Kill. The original
village plan comprised only the area extending from the main
Binne Kill on the west to Ferry street on the east, and from the
Mohawk River on the north to the lowlands on the south. It was
divided into four blocks, or squares, and these were subdivided
into house-lots. Van Curler's lot was at the corner of Church
and Union streets. The entire area of the village was enclosed
and fortified with stockades, or palisades. The streets were
laid out regular and at right angles.
They were named:
1. Handelaers (Traders) street. The name was changed in 1690 to
Lion street, and at the close of the Revolutionary War to
Washington street (now Washington avenue).
2. Front street, which still retains the name, and was so called
because it was next to the river.
3. Ferry street, which retains its name, and was so called
because at the foot of it was the landing place for boats.
4. Church street, which still bears the same name, and was so
called because the earliest church (Reformed Dutch) was built at
its southern termination.
5. Niskayuna street. This is now known as Union street.
6. Albany street. After the massacre of 1690, the name was
changed to Martelaers (Martyrs) street. It is now known as State
street.
The alluvial
tract of arable land (Dutch, bouwland) extending from the river
and State street on the north to the sand bluff on the south,
comprised an area of several hundred acres, and was called the
Great Flat (Groote Vlachte). When it first came into the
possession of Europeans, it was mainly cleared land, and its
fertile soil had been cultivated by the Indians for many years.
A nature preserve covers a portion of the Groote Vlachte today.
The first Stockade was built in about 1664
and a second larger Stockade was built after the Massacre.

In the drawing above the location of the
Stockades is superimposed over a map of the historic district.
(back)
French and Indian Wars
The French and
Indian Wars is a name used in this country for a series of
conflicts in North America that represented the engagements
that accompanied the European dynastic wars. In each of these
wars the French and the English ( and Dutch) enlisted the help
of their Indian allies. The Iroquois were align with the Dutch
and English and the Huron or Wyandot with the French. The
timeline for the series of wars was:

The massacre at
Schenectady took place early in King Williams War on a bitter
cold night in February 1690. There had been a very heavy snow
fall a few days before and the residents of the village
felt secure, thinking that the harsh winter conditions protected
them. Schenectady is said to have had at this time about 80
houses and 400 inhabitants. The village was mainly west of Ferry
street, and was protected by a wooden stockade. There were two
gates, one at the north end of Church street, the other at the
south end, opening out to the Albany road. There was, also, near
what is now the corner of Washington and Front streets, a fort
garrisoned by 24 men. The raiding party, which had
traveled 200miles from Montreal consisted of 114 Frenchmen and
96 Indians (mostly of the Sault
Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa
Indians ) took part in the assault.
Of the various
accounts, English and French, the most reliable appears to be
the one written by Mons. de Monseignat, Comptroller-General of
the Marine in Canada. The following extract from his report
includes the most important part of the account.
"At eleven of the clock at night, they came within sight of
the town, resolved to defer the assault until two o clock of the
morning. But the excessive cold admitted of no further delay.
The town of Corlard (Schenectady) forms a sort of oblong with
only two gates, one opposite where our party had halted, the
other opening toward Orange (Albany), which is only six leagues
(~15 miles) distant. Messieurs de Sainte Helene and de Mantet were to enter
at the first, which was found wide open. Messieurs d'Iberville
and de Montesson took the left with another detachment, in order
to make themselves masters of that leading to Orange. But they
could not discover it, and returned to join the remainder of the
party. A profound silence was everywhere observed, until the two
commanders, who separated after having entered the town, for the
purpose of encircling it, met at the other extremity. "
" The signal of attack was given Indian fashion, and the
entire force rushed on simultaneously. M. de Mantet placed
himself at the head of one detachment and reached a small fort
where the garrison was under arms. The gate was burst in after a
good deal of difficulty, the whole set on fire, and all who
defended the place were slaughtered. The sack of the town began
a moment before the attack on the fort. Few houses made any
resistance. The massacre lasted two hours. The remainder of the
night was spent in placing sentinels and in taking some rest.
The house belonging to the minister [Rev. Peter Tassemaker] was
ordered to be saved, so as to take him alive to obtain
information from him; but as it was not known, it was not spared
any more than the others. He was killed in it and his papers
were burnt before he could be recognized."
"In order to occupy the Indians, who would otherwise have
taken to drink and thus rendered themselves unable for defense,
the houses had already been set on fire. None were spared in the
town but one belonging to Coudre [John Glenn], and that of a
widow who had six children, whither M. de Montigny had been
carried when wounded. All the rest were burnt. The lives of
between fifty and sixty persons, old men, women and children,
were spared, they having escaped the first fury of the attack;
also some thirty Iroquois, in order to show them that it was the
English, and not they, against whom the grudge was entertained."
The
French lost but two men at the attack on the town; but their
return to Canada was attended with great hardships and the loss
of 19 more men. Of the inhabitants of Schenectady, 60 were slain
in the massacre, 27 were carried into captivity, one (or
possibly more) escaped to Albany, and the remainder probably
fled for refuge to their friends and neighbors who were settled
along the river.
By 1704 the Stockade was
repaired and expanded to College Street on the East and to
Cowhorn creek on the south. A new fort, the Queen Anne's or
Queens Fort was built near where the "Lawrence the Indian"
statue now stands to garrison troops. Another fort known as the
King's fort was built where the Community College now stands.
This fort was built to house both white and Indian refugees
while the village was rebuilt.
Finally, during the French an Indian War the Queens fort was
rebuild and the stockade enlarged once again extending the
northern border to the Mohawk River.
(back)
The Revolutionary War
As the French and Indian war ended in 1763 with the surrendering of the French
colonies, the English Parliament passed the first of a series of acts to consolidate
control on the American Colonies and help pay the costs for the war which left the
British Treasury reeling with debts. These acts, eventually became known
as the "intolerable acts," because of the taxes levied on the colonists
sent a wave of protest throughout all the American colonies.
In 1765 the growing dissatisfaction with English rule was manifested at the Dutch
Reformed Church (which stood in the intersection of Church and Union
Streets) as the first of several "Liberty" flags were raised in protest.
In 1773 the population of
Schenectady was spilling beyond the boundaries of the second
(1704) stockaded area. The walls were in disrepair. Companies of militia were
raised at the Stockade which served at Fort Ticonderoga and at
the battle of Saratoga. Most of the militia from the Stockade
served in the Mohawk Valley which was hotly contested throughout
the war, since the majority of the Iroquois and many of
the valley residents (called Tories) sided with the
British. The Valley was also a major source of grain and other
supplies for the
Continental Army. Numerous Indian raids took place in and around
the Valley and the bloodiest battle of the Revolutionary War,
the Battle of Oriskany, took place in the western part of the
Valley and the Battle of Saratoga took place near the juncture
of the Mohawk and Hudson rivers. These 2 battles, whose sites
are now National Parks, prevented the British from cutting New
England off from the middle Atlantic and southern colonies...
which was the British strategy for victory in both the
Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. A detailed description of
the Stockade during the Revolution is found at:
http://www.schenectadyhistory.org/resources/hanson/
(back)
The Western Gateway and the Erie Canal
Although the early settlers were
unaware of the causes of these waterways, they soon saw their
advantages. The first description we have of these natural
avenues of communication is found in a report to the Colonial
Governor, in 1724, by Cadwallader Colden. Colden appears to be
one of the first to appreciate the value of the natural streams
of New York as a means of commerce, and he even extends his view
to a line of communication from the Hudson to the Great Lakes,
and thence to the Mississippi and the ocean.
Colden makes the first
suggestion of the course of the route along which the Erie was
finally built. "Goods are daily carried from this Province to
the Sennekas," say the members of a committee, of whom
Colden was one, in reporting to the Governor on November 6,
1724, "as well as to those Nations that lie nearer, by Water all
the Way, except three Miles, (or in the dry Season, five Miles)
where the Traders carry over Land between the Mohawks-River
and the Wood Creek, which runs into, the Oneida-Lake,
without going near either St. Lawrence-River or any of
the Lakes upon which the French pass." From
Schenectady to Lake Ontario, there were but three portages, two
of them very short. The portage between the Mohawk River
and Wood's Creek and was called the
Oneida
Carrying Place and later the Great Portage at Rome.
These natural watercourses became
the first public highways, and roads, when they were opened
later, were so poor and the carrying of goods over them so
expensive, that the people naturally retained the streams as
channels for the transportation of goods and often as a means of
travel, making some improvements from time to time, as we learn
from some of the early writers. As a result of the Stockades
location at the eastern end of this waterway, a good highway was
built through the pine barrens between the Stockade and Albany.
This highway was called the Kings Highway and much of the route
can be travelled today. Thus goods or immigrants could load at
Amsterdam or London, be unloaded at Albany, carted over the
Kings Highway and loaded onto Bateau at Schenectady, and carried
to the Great Lakes. By 1808, some improvements had been made in
the old Indian trail that ran just north of the river and this
led to the first bridge being built across the Mohawk.
The bridge, erected at the foot of Washington Ave. was designed by the celebrated bridge architect, Theodore Burr, and was
considered a masterpiece of skill. Its original
symmetry and beauty were afterward greatly marred by the addition of several piers and ungraceful
coverings. For a time it was the longest bridge in the world. In 1874, it was replaced by a new
bridge, built on the same piers. The original piers are visible
today and form a backdrop to a neighborhood maintained public
garden.
"Batteau" is a French term for "boat".
It came to signify, 200 years ago, any flat-bottomed,
shallow-draft vessel that was pointed at both ends. This vessel
was the mainstay of inland shipping, particularly for the
military, until the end of the 18th century.
Batteaux (the plural) came in different
sizes, known generally as 3-handed,4-handed or
5-handed according to the crew needed to propel them. There
were undoubtedly many variations in design, but all were
characterized by a flat bottom made up of pine boards laid
lengthwise, with battens nailed across to hold the bottom
together. Oak frames, usually made from natural crooks, fastened
the bottom to the pine planks that formed the sides of the
vessel.
These craft were propelled by poles and
oars, with a small sail used when the wind permitted. The Mohawk
River batteaux built in Schenectady( actually at the Stockade
along the shores of the Binnie Kill) were apparently smaller and
lighter than most, because of the shallow and often constricted
channel they had to navigate and the several portages around
which they had to be carried on their way west to Lake Ontario.
They carried about 3000 lbs. of cargo. Prior to the Revolution
as many as 600 batteaux made the journey from the Stockade to
Lake Ontario. The port of Schenectady was along the banks of the
Binnie Kill on the western side of the Stockade. Washington Ave.
was lined with warehouses, docks and boatyards as well as
taverns and boarding houses.
George Washington in 1783 wrote: "I
have lately made a tour, . . . through the Lakes George and
Champlain as far as Crown Point; then returning to Schenectady,
I proceeded up the Mohawk river to Fort Schuyler, crossed over
to Wood Creek which empties into the Oneida lake, and affords
the water communication with Ontario. I then traversed the
country to the head of the eastern branch of the Susquehanna,
and viewed the lake Otsego, and the portage between that lake
and the Mohawk river at Conajohario. Prompted by these actual
observations, I could not help taking a more contemplative and
extensive view of the vast inland navigation of these United
States, and could not but be struck with the immense diffusion
and importance of it; and with the goodness of that Providence
which has dealt his favors to us with so profuse a hand. Would
to God we may have wisdom enough to improve them. I shall
not rest contented until I have explored the western country,
and traversed those lines (or great part of them) which have
given bounds to a new empire." Also in 1784, Christopher Colles
petitioned the Assembly and Senate of the State of New York for
permission to improve the Mohawk waterway so as to remove all
obstructions. Nothing came of this petition but others picked up
the challenge of improving the Mohawk waterway.
In 1791, a resident of Albany, Elkanah
Watson, a resident in Albany began a persistent push to build a
canal. He became a director of the Inland Lock Navigation
Company when that company was incorporated in 1792. Eventually
with the help of General Schuyler and Gov. Clinton the State
committed to build the canal. Ultimately it was decided to build
a canal system that would connect the Hudson River to Lake
Ontario, Lake Erie and Lake Champlain.
The most difficult part of the canal
system to build was the section between the Stockade and the
falls at Cohoes, where the river cuts through steep hills and
gorges. Originally the path of the Canal through Schenectady
would have been along the river, where Riverside Park now
stands. After construction had started, a serious flood
inundated the area where the canal was being built. That along
with entreaties by some business men who wanted the canal to run
through the middle of the growing city resulted in the canal
route being moved to where Erie boulevard now runs. The eastern
section of the Erie Canal and the Champlain Canal were completed
in 1823 and the Canals were officially opened on October 1,
1823. The canal was a great financial success and quickly paid
of its debt. By 1834, it was recognized that the traffic was
such that the should be enlarged and deepened. this was by 1845.
Remnant of this enlarged canal or visible throughout the Mohawk
valley including a large lock about 1.5 miles west of the
Stockade. The large number of locks between Schenectady and the
Cohoes falls made that section of the canal very slow to
traverse. as a result many choose to use the continually
improving Kings Highway.
George Featherstonhaugh (pronounced
fen-shaw), a resident of nearby Duanesburg, saw a business
opportunity related to the Kings highway. He was aware that
George Stephenson in Great Britain had invented a steam
locomotive in 1814 to haul coal out of mines. He
envisioned using the same technology to haul people and material
between Albany and Schenectady
On December 28, 1825, he ran a
newspaper notice announcing the formation of the Mohawk and
Hudson Rail Road Company. The M and H Railroad became the first
chartered railroad in NYS on April 17, 1826. Construction began
in August 1830 and the railroad opened September 24, 1831, on a
16-mile route between Albany and Schenectady through the Pine
Bush region that separates both cities. Initially horses were
used. The DeWitt Clinton locomotive made its first test run on
July 2nd that year. It was the fourth locomotive built in
America. The railroad was seen as a way to expand land
transportation as the Erie Canal was the leading transportation
network of the time, but it took an extremely long time to go
from Albany to Schenectady on the canal as there were over a
dozen locks between the two cities, due to Cohoes Falls.
While the Mohawk and Hudson was
the fourth railroad in the US, it was the first to have
passanger service. In 1832, a rider wrote in his journal. "June
28, arrive in Schenectady. Among the astonishing inventions of
man, surely that of the locomotive steam engine hath no
secondary rank. By this matchless exercise of skill, we fly with
a smooth and even course along once impassible barriers, the
valleys are filled, the mountains laid low, and distance seems
annihilated. I took my seat as near as possible to the car
containing the engine, in order to examine more minutely the
operation of this, to me, novel and stupendous specimen of human
skill. Having thus, as if by some invisible agency flown the
distance of 16 miles in 40 minutes, at Schenectady I took
passage on the Hudson and Erie Canal for Buffalo."
The western terminus of this early
railroad was at the top of the Crane Street hill, about one-half
a mile from the Stockade. From there stationary engines were
used to lower the carriages down to the Erie Canal.
Many, if not most of the immigrants who
settled the Midwest arrived at New York, took Hudson River
Schooners or early steamboats up the Hudson to Albany, traveled
the Kings Highway or the Mohawk and Hudson railroad to
Schenectady and then took the Erie canal west and settled in
Ohio, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa and Indiana. This
flood of settlers earned Schenectady the sobriquet " The Gateway
to the West".
The Great Fire of 1819
In the Historical Society building on
Washington Avenue is a
signed lithograph by Len Tantillo. It is titled "Schenectady
Harbor, 1814." The scene depicted is the backyards of the
houses on Washington Ave. as viewed from
across the Binne Kill - 186 years ago. The artist's depiction of the Binne Kill shows the
many wharves, warehouses, and boat-building facilities which
lined this waterway prior to the opening of the Erie Canal.
The buildings along the Binne Kill
together with many valuable properties on Washington Ave. did not survive
the Great Fire of 1819. The fire which burned for two days razed
160 buildings in the center of Schenectady's downtown. The fire
was fought with a bucket brigade. A strong breeze moved the fire
along. There was no incentive to rebuild the waterfront
building, as work was already underway on the Erie Canal. In
Schenectady the "Erie" ran parallel to the river down what is
now Erie Boulevard. So the commercial rebuilding was done away from the
river. And most of the buildings along the west side of
Washington Avenue ended up as residences with substantial backyards thanks to
the Great Fire and the opening of the Erie Canal.
These two
events, occurring in closely in time, are the reason that the
Stockade survived. Now it was essentially on an island between
the canal and the river and nearly all commercial development
took place to the east and south. The early captains of industry
chose the Stockade as the preferred place to have their homes.
Their children intermingled and married descendents of the
original settlers.
The
Industrial Era
In the 19th Century
Schenectady experienced significant growth due to the need for
workers at The Schenectady Locomotive Works and later the
General Electric Company. Schenectady was a key manufacturing
center during the Civil War.
The
Stockade continued to be the preferred place for the
industrialist to live until the creation of the
GE
Reality Plot in the early 20th Century. The "Plot' as
it is known was Schenectady's second historic district. The
"Plot" is beautifully described and documented in "Enclave of
Elegance" by Bruce Maston, MD., JD. During this period many
large mansions were built in the Stockade, notably the Ellis
Mansion and the...... Mansion. Many other houses were enlarged
and modernized. Many building facades and interiors had
Victorian elements added.
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