Online Encyclopedia

POUGHKEEPSIE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 213 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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POUGHKEEPSIE  , a

city and the county-seat of Dutchess county, New York, U.S.A., and on the east
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bank of the Hudson
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river, 93 M . N. of New York City . Pop . (1910 census), 27,936 . It is served by the New York Central & Hudson River, the New York, New Haven &
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Hartford, the West
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Shore, the Central New England, and the Poughkeepsie & Eastern (merged in the Central New England)
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railways, and by river steamboat lines on the Hudson . A cantilever railway
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bridge, 226o ft. long (6767 ft., including approaches) and 200 ft. above the
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water, spans the Hudson at this point . The city is built partly on terraces rising 200 ft. above the river and partly on a level plateau above . On the Hudson here is the course for the inter-collegiate boat-races in which the
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American college crews (save those of Yale and Harvard, which row on the
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Thames at New
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London) have rowed annually, beginning in 1895, except in 1896, when the
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race was rowed at Saratoga . In the north-eastern
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part of the city is College Hill Park, and in the centre is Eastman Park (11 acres, originally the home of Harvey Gridley Eastman) . Vassar College (q.v.), one of the most famous
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women's colleges in
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America, occupies extensive grounds a short distance east of the city . Other educational institutions are the Lyndon Hall School (1848) for girls, Putnam Hall (for girls), St Faith's School (
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Protestant Episcopal; removed in 1904 from Saratoga Springs, where it was founded in 189o), Riverview Military Academy (1836), and Eastman Business College, one of the largest commercial
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schools in the country, founded in 1859 by Harvey Gridley Eastman (1832–1878) . Immediately north of Poughkeepsie is the Hudson River State Hospital for the Insane (1871); in the city are the Vassar Brothers' Hospital (1878), with which a nurses' training school is connected; the Vassar Brothers' Home (1881) for aged and infirm men; the Poughkeepsie
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Orphan House and Home for the Friendless (1847); the Old Ladies' Home (1870); the Pringle Memorial Home (1899), for aged and indigent men, and the Adriance Memorial Library (45,000 volumes in 1909) .

The city is a manufacturing centre of considerable importance; the factory products in 1905 were valued at $7,206,914, an increase of 29.2 % over 1900 . Poughkeepsie was settled by the Dutch about 1698, taking its name from an

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Indian word " Apokeepsing," or " Pooghkepesingh," which seems to have been the name of a
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waterfall on the river front . The New York legislature met in Poughkeepsie in 1778, 1780, 1781, 1782, 1788 and 1795, and here in 1788 met the convention which ratified for New York the Federal constitution (
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July 28) . Poughkeepsie was incorporated as a
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village in 1799 and was chartered as a city in 1854 .

End of Article: POUGHKEEPSIE
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