Online Encyclopedia

SARATOGA SPRINGS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 206 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SARATOGA SPRINGS  , a
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village of Saratoga county, New York, U.S.A., about 38 m . N. of Albany, and about 12 M . W. of the Hudson
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river . Pop . (1900) 12,409, of whom 1684 were
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foreign-born and 619 were negroes; (1910) 12,693 . Saratoga Springs is served by the
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Delaware & Hudson and the Boston & Maine
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railways and by several interurban electric lines . The village is in a region of
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great historic
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interest, is famous for its medicinal
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mineral springs, and has long been one of the most popular watering places in
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America . Its hotels accommodate more than 20,000 guests . Of the hotels, the best known are the
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United States, Congress Hall, the
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Grand Union and the
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American-Adelphi . The springs, of which there are more than
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forty, were known in colonial times . The waters, all having the same ingredients but in varying
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pro-portions, are heavily charged with carbonic acid
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gas, and contain considerable quantities of bicarbonates of lime and magnesium, and chloride of sodium . They rise in a stratum of
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Potsdam
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sandstone, underlaid by Laurentian
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gneiss, &c., and reach the
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surface after passing through a bed of blue clay .

The most noteworthy springs are Congress,

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Vichy, Arondack, Hathorn, Patterson, High Rock, Putnam,
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Star, Red, Lincoln, Victoria,
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Carlsbad and Geyser . Some of the springs originally rose above the surface by their own force, but with the
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boring of new springs and the pumping for carbonic acid gas south of the village the pressure was greatly lessened; the courts interfered to stop the pumping and it was prohibited by the state legislature . These
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measures, however, were not effective, and in May 1909 an act was passed establishing a state reservation at Saratoga, creating a commission of three to select the lands to be taken over by the state, and providing for an issue of bonds for $600,eoo to buy the springs . Saratoga Lake, a beautiful
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body of
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water 6 m. long and 1 m. wide, 3; m. south-east of the village, is a favourite resort . The streets are well-shaded and broad, with side stretches of
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lawn between the sidewalk and the curb . There is a speedway and a famous
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race-track, where there are
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annual
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running races . In the village are Woodlawn Park (1200 acres), a
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town-hall, a state armoury, a public library, several theatres and a number of private hospitals and sanatoriums . The Convention Hall has been the meeting place of many conventions; near it is a re-production of the House of Pansa at
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Pompeii, built by Franklin W . Smith . The
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principal business is the bottling and
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shipping of the mineral waters which are sold in large quantities and exported to many foreign countries . Among the manufactures are patent medicines, druggists' preparations and chemicals,
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silk gloves, textiles, foundry products and boilers and engines . In 1905 the value of the factory product was $1,709,073, an increase of 28.1% since 1900 .

The Saratoga

country was a favourite summer camping ground of the
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Iroquois, particularly the Mohawks, who were attracted thither by the medicinal value of the springs long before
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European visited the region . The
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Indian name, " Sa-ragh-to-ga " or " Se-rach-to-gue," is said to have meant " hillside country of the great water " or " place of the swift water." The
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district became during the colonial
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wars a theatre of hostilities between the French and
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English colonists and their Indian allies . In 1693 a French expedition was checked in a sharp conflict near Mt M°Gregor by an English and colonial force under Governor Benjamin Fletcher and Peter Schuyler . Early in the 18th century the region along the upper Hudson began to be settled, the settlement on the Hudson at the mouth of the Fishkill, directly east of the
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present Saratoga Springs, being known first as Saratoga (later " Old Saratoga ") and finally as Schuylerville (pop. in 1905, 1529), in honour of the Schuyler
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family . Upon the settlement the French and Indians descended in 1745, and massacred many of the inhabitants . After the close of the Seven Years' War, there was a new influx of settlers . Near Stillwater (pop. in 1905, 973), about 5 M. south-east of the present village, the battles of Saratoga (q.v.) were fought during the War of Independence . On the site of the present village a small log lodging house for the reception of visitors was built in 1771 . After the close of the War of Independence, the fame of the Springs as a
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health resort spread abroad, and many sought them annually . In 1791 Gideon Putnam (1764-1812), a
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nephew of Major-General Israel Putnam, bought a large tract of
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land here; he built the first
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inn (on the site of the present Grand Union Hotel) . Other hotels were erected within the next few years ; between 182o and 1830, by which time the Springs had become one of the most popular of American resorts, several large
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barn-like wooden hotels were constructed; and Saratoga Springs was incorporated as a village in 1826 . See G .

G .

Scott and J . S . L'Amoreaux,
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History of Saratoga County (New York, 1876), N . B . Sylvester, History of Saratoga County (
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Philadelphia, 1878), and G . B . Anderson, Saratoga County (New York, 1899) .

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