Online Encyclopedia

CROWN POINT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 519 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CROWN POINT  , a
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village of Essex county, New York, U.S.A., in a township of the same name, about 90 M . N.E. of Albany and about to m . N. of
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Ticonderoga, on the W.
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shore of Lake Champlain . Pop. of the township (1890) 3135; (1900) 2112; (1905) 1890; (1910) 1690; of the village, about moo . The village is served by the
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Delaware & Hudson Railway and by the Champlain Canal . Among the manufactures are
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lumber and woodenware .
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Graphite has been found in the western
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part of the township, and spar is
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mined . In 1609 Champlain fought near here the engagement with the
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Iroquois Indians which marked the beginning of the long enmity between the Five (later Six) Nations and the French . Subsequently Dutch and
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English traders trafficked in the vicinity, the latter maintaining here for many years a
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regular trading-
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post . In 1731 the French built here Fort Frederic, the first military post at
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Crown Point, and the place was subsequently for many years of considerable strategic importance, owing to its situation on Lake Champlain, which with Lake George furnished a comparatively easy route from
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Canada to New York . Twice during the French and
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Indian War, in 1755 and again in 1756, English and colonial expeditions were sent against it in vain; it remained in French hands until 1759, when, after Lord Jeffrey Amherst's occupation of Ticonderoga, the garrison joined that of the latter place and retreated to Canada . Crown Point was then'occupied by Amherst, who during the winter of 1759—1760 began the construction, about a quarter of a mile from the old Fort Frederic, of a large fort, which was garrisoned but was never completed; the ruins of this fort (not of Fort Frederic) still remain .

At the outbreak of the War of

Independence, on the 15th of May 1775, the fort, whose garrison then consisted of only a dozen men, was captured by Colonel Seth Warner and a force of " Green Mountain Boys," sent from Ticonderoga by Ethan Allen; and it remained in
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American hands save for a brief period in 1777, when it was occupied by a detachment of Burgoyne's invading army .

End of Article: CROWN POINT
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JOHN CROWNE (d. c. 1703)

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