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UTICA

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 820 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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UTICA  , a

city and the county-seat of Oneida county, New York, U.S.A., on the
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Mohawk
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river, about 45 M . E. of Syracuse and about 85 M . W. of Albany . Pop . (189o) 44,007; (1900) 56,383, of whom 13,470 were
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foreign-born, including 3696 Germans, 2458 Irish, 1661 Italians and 1165 Welsh; (1910, census) 74,419 . Utica is served by the New York Central & Hudson River and several lines leased by it, including the Rome,
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Watertown &
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Ogdensburg; the
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Delaware, Lackawanna & Western; the New York, Ontario & Western; and the West
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Shore
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railways; by the
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Erie Canal, and by interurban electric railways . The city is situated on ground rising gradually from the river . There are many
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fine business and public buildings, especially on Genesee Street, the '
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principal thorough-fare, and Utica is known for the number of its institutions, public and private . Those of an educational character include, in addition to the public
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schools and the Utica
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Free Academy, the New School (for girls) and the Utica Catholic Academy . Among the
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libraries are included the Public Library (1893) with 54,E volumes in 1909, the library of the Oneida
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Historical Society (which occupies the Munson-Williams Memorial
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Building), the Utica Law Library and the Deutscher Leserverein . The city is the seat of a State Hospital for the Insane (1843) . Among its many charitable institutions are a Masonic Home and School (1893), a Home for the Homeless (1867), St Elizabeth's Home (1886), St Luke's Home (1869), a Home for Aged Men and Couples (1879), Utica
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Orphan Asylum (1830), St Joseph's Infant Home (1893) and St John's
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Female Orphan Asylum (1834), both under the Sisters of Charity; the House of the Good Shepherd (1872;
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Protestant Episcopal); and the General (1873: City of Utica), Homeopathic (1895), St Luke's (1869; supported by the Protestant Episcopal Churches), St Elizabeth's (1866;-Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis) and Faxton (1873) hospitals .

Among the public buildings are a Federal building,the city

hall, the County Court House, a Y.M.C.A. building, a Masonic Temple, an Odd-Fellows' Temple and a State Armoury and
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Arsenal . The city has a number of fine parks . In
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Forest Hill Cemetery are the graves of Horatio Seymour and Roscoe Conkling . On West
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Canada creek, about 15 M . N. of Utica, are Trenton Falls, which descend 312 ft. in 2 m., through a sand-stone chasm, in a series of cataracts, some of them having an 8o ft. fall . From the
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geological formation here the name Trenton is applied to the upper series of the Ordovician (or
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Lower
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Silurian)
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system, and, particularly, to the lowest stage of this series . Utica has varied and extensive manufactures . In 1905 the capital invested in manufacturing
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industries was $21,184,033, and the
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total value of the factory products was $22,880,317, an increase of 38.8% since 1900 . Of this product,
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hosiery and knit goods, with a total value of $5,261,166, comprised 23% of all, and. cotton goods ($4,287,658), 18.7% . The hosiery and knit goods constituted 3.9% of the total value of that product of the entire country . Other important products were: men's clothing ($2,943,214); foundry and machine-
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shop products ($1,607,258); steam fittings and
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heating apparatus ($1,010,755); malt liquors ($933,278); and
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lumber products ($869,000) . Among the other manufactures are food preparations, wooden
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ware, wagons and carriages, stoves and furnaces, boots and shoes,
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tobacco and cigars,
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flour, candy, gloves, bricks, tile and pottery, furniture, paper boxes and firearms .

Utica is a

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shipping point for the products of a fertile agricultural region, from which are exported
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dairy products (especially cheese), nursery products, flowers (especially roses), small fruits and vegetables, honey and hops . The territory on which Utica was built was
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part of the 22,000-acre tract granted in 1734 by George II. to William Cosby (c . 1695-1736), colonial governor of New York in 1732-36, and to his associates, and it was known as Cosby's
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Manor . During the Seven Years' War a palisaded fort was erected on the south
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bank of the Mohawk at the ford where Utica later sprung up . It was named Fort Schuyler, in honour of Colonel Peter Schuyler, an
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uncle of General Philip Schuyler . A fort subsequently built at Rome also was at first called Fort Schuyler (and afterwards Fort Stanwix), and the fort at Utica was then distinguished from it by the prefix " old " and it was as " Old Fort Schuyler " that Utica was first known . The most used trade route to the western country crossed the Mohawk here . In default of payment of arrears of
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rent Cosby's Manor was sold at
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sheriff's sale in 1792 and was bid in by General Philip Schuyler, General John Bradstreet, John Morin Scott and others for £1387, or about 15 cents an acre . Soon after the close of the War of Independence a settlement was begun, most of the newcomers being Palatine Germans from the lower Mohawk . In 1786 the proprietors had the manor surveyed . An
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inn was erected in 1788, and new settlers, largely New Englanders, began to arrive . Among these, in 1789, was Peter Smith (1768-1837), later a partner of John Jacob Astor, and
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father of Gerrit Smith, who was born here in 1797 .

In 1792 a

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bridge was built across the Mohawk . In 1797 Oneida county was established, and the
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village was incorporated under the name of Utica . The first newspaper, the
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Gazette, began publication in the same
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year, and the first church, Trinity (Protestant Episcopal), was built . The Erie Canal, completed in 1825, added to Utica's prosperity . Utica was chartered as a city in 1832 . - See Pomroy Jones, Annals and Recollections of Oneida County (Rome, N.Y., 1851) ; M . M . Bagg, Pioneers of Utica (Utica, 1877) ; Outline
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History of Utica and Vicinity (Utica, 1900) ; and the publications of the Oneida Historical Society (Utica, 1881 sqq.) .

End of Article: UTICA
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