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SCHENECTADY

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 320 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SCHENECTADY  , a

city and the county-seat of Schenectady county, New York, U.S.A., about 16 m . N.W. of Albany, on the
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Mohawk
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river and the
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Erie Canal . Pop . (189o) 19,902; (1900) 31,682, of whom 7169 were
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foreign-born; (1910, census) 72,826 . Schenectady is served by the New York Central & Hudson River, and the
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Delaware & Hudson
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railways, and by interurban electric lines connecting with Albany, Troy, Saratoga, Amsterdam,
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Johnstown and
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Gloversville . The city has a
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fine situation about 230 ft. above the sea . It, is a place of much historic
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interest, and has many examples of quaint Dutch colonial and early
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American architecture . There is an
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Indian monument on the site of the " old fort." Schenectady is the seat of Union College (undenominational), which grew out of the Schenectady Academy (1784), was chartered in 1795, and comprises the
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academic and
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engineering departments of Union University, the medical (1838), law (1851) and
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pharmacy (1881) departments of which are at Albany, where also is the Dudley
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Observatory (1852), which is under the control of the university . Schenectady is a manufacturing centre of growing importance; here are the main
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works of the General Electric
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Company, manufacturers of electrical implements, apparatus, motors and supplies, and of the American
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Locomotive Company . Together they give employment to about So% of the wage-earners of the city . Among other manufactures are
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hosiery and knit goods, overalls and suspenders, hardware,
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lumber, oils and varnishes, gasoline fire engines,
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mica insulators, agricultural implements, and wagons and carriages . The capital invested in manufacturing
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industries in 1905 was $22,050,746, and the value of the factory product was $33,084,431, an increase of 87.9% since 1900 .

According to tradition Schenectady stands on the site of the

chief
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village of the Mohawk Indians, and its name, of which there are many different spellings in early records, is probably of Indian origin; on an early map (1665) it appears as Scanacthade . Arendt
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Van Corlaer, or Curler (d . 1667),' while manager of the estates of his cousin, the patroon, Killian Van
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Rensselaer, visited the site in 1642, and in 1662, being dissatisfied with conditions on the
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Manor, he led a
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band of settlers here . Their allegiance was directly to the Dutch West India Company, and they enjoyed 1 Van Corlaer had emigrated to
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America about 163o; while manager of Rensselaerwyck he had earned the confidence of the Indians, among whom " Corlaer " became a generic
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term for the
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English
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governors, and especially the governors of New York . a greater degree of freedom, especially commercial freedom, than had been possible on the Manor . The
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land was
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purchased from the Mohawks . To each of the fifteen
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original proprietors, except Van Corlaer, who received a double portion, was assigned a village lot 200 ft. sq., a tract of bottom-land for farming purposes, a
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strip of woodland, and
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common pasture rights . Many of the early settlers were well-to-do and brought their slaves with them, and for many years the settlement was reputed the richest in the colony . It received a serious set-back in 169o, when on the 9th of
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February a force of French and Indians surprised and burned the village, massacred sixty of the inhabitants and carried
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thirty into captivity . The village was rebuilt in the following
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year, and a military
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post was established . About 1700 there was a considerable influx of English settlers . In 1748 the French and Indians again descended on the region and killed many of the inhabitants of the outlying settlement at Beukendaal, 3 as .

N.W. of Schenectady . Schenectady became a chartered

borough in 1765 and a city in 1798 . The first newspaper, the
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Gazette, was established in 1799 . For some years after the completion of the Erie Canal, Schenectady, which had formerly been an important depot of the Mohawk river boat trade to the westward, suffered a decline . The first two railways in the state made Schenectady their
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terminus, the Mohawk & Hudson opening to Albany in September 1831 and the Saratoga & Schenectady in
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July 1832; the original station of the Mohawk & Hudson is still
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standing . It was not, however, until its new manufacturing era began, about 188o, that Schenectady's
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modern growth and prosperity began . See Jonathan Pearson, A
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History of Schenectady Patent in the Dutch and English Times (Albany, 1883) ; G . S . Roberts, Old Schenectady (Schenectady, 19o4); and G . R . Howell and J . H .

Munsell, History of the County of Schenectady (Albany, 1887) .

End of Article: SCHENECTADY
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