Online Encyclopedia

OSWEGO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 364 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OSWEGO  , a

city,
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port of entry, and the county-seat of Oswego county, New York, U.S.A., on the S.E.
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shore of Lake Ontario, at the mouth of the Oswego
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river, about 35 M . N.W. of Syracuse . Pop . (1900) 22,199, of whom 3989 were
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foreign born; (1910 census) 23,368 . It is served by the New York Central & Hudson River, the
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Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, and the New York, Ontario & Western
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railways, by several lines of lake steamboats, and by the Oswego Canal, which connects Lake Ontario with the
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Erie Canal at Syracuse . There is an inner harbour of 9.35 acres and an
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outer harbour of 140 acres, which are defended by Fort Ontario . The city lies at an altitude of 300 ft., and is divided into two parts by the Oswego river . Oswego is the seat of a state Normal and Training School (founded as the City Training School in 1861, and a state school since 1867), a state armenry, and a
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United States
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life-saving station; among the public buildings are the City Library (about 14,000 volumes in 1909), founded by Gerrit Smith in 1855, the Federal
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Building and Custom House, the City Hall, the City Hospital, the County Court House, an
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Orphan Asylum, and a business college . The Oswego river has here a fall of 34 ft. and furnishes excellent
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water power . Among the
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principal manufactures are
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starch (the city has one of the largest starch factories in the
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world), knit goods, railway car springs, shade-
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cloth, boilers and engines, wooden-
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ware, matches; paper-cutting
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machines, and eau de cologne . The factory products were valued in 1905 at $7,592,125 . Oswego has a considerable trade with
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Canada; in 1908 its exports were valued at $2,880,553 and its imports at $999,164 .

Lake

commerce with other
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American
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Great Lake ports is also of some importance, the principal articles of trade being
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lumber, grain and
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coal . The site of Oswego was visited by
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Samuel de Champlain in 1616 . Subsequently it was a station for the Jesuit missionaries and the coureurs
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des bois . In 1722 a
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regular trading
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post was established here by
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English traders, and in 1727 Governor William Burnet of New York erected the first Fort Oswego (sometimes called Fort Burnet, Chouaguen or Pepperrell) . It was an important
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base of operations during King George's War and the French and
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Indian War . In the years 1755–1756 the
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British erected two new forts at the mouth of the river, Fort Oswego (an enlargement of the earlier fort) on the east and Fort Ontario on the west . In August 1756 Montcalm, marching rapidly from
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Ticonderoga with a force of 3000 French and Indians, appeared before the forts, then garrisoned by moo British and colonial troops, and on the 14th of August forced the abandonment of Fort Ontario . On the following day he stormed and captured Fort Oswego, and, dismantling both, returned to Ticonderoga . The British restored Fort Ontario in 1759, and maintained a garrison here until 1796, when, with other posts on the lakes, they were, in accordance with the terms of Jay's Treaty, made over to the United States . It was here in 1766 that Pontiac formally made to
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Sir William Johnson his acknowledgment of Great Britain's authoritr° On the 6th of May 1814 Sir James Yeo, with a
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superior force of British and Canadians, captured the fort. but soon afterwards withdrew . In 1839 the fort was rebuilt and occupied by United States troops; it was abandoned in 1899, but, after having been reconstructed, was again garrisoned in 1905 . The
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modern city may be said to date from 1796 .

Oswego became the county-seat in 1816, was incorporated as a

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village in 1828 (when the Oswego Canal was completed), and was first chartered as a city in 1848 . See Churchill, Smith and Child, Landmarks of Oswego County (Syracuse, 1895) .

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