Nassau County Museum of Arts and Craft Show 2018
Glens Falls | |
---|---|
City | |
Nickname(due south): Hometown U.South.A. | |
Glens Falls Location of Glens Falls in New York | |
Coordinates: 43°18′44″Northward 73°38′54″West / 43.31222°N 73.64833°W / 43.31222; -73.64833 Coordinates: 43°18′44″Due north 73°38′54″W / 43.31222°N 73.64833°Due west / 43.31222; -73.64833 | |
Land | United States |
State | New York |
County | Warren |
Incorporated | 1839 (village) 1908 (city) |
Government | |
• Type | Mayor-Council |
• Mayor | Due south. William Collins (D)[1] |
Surface area [2] | |
• City | 3.99 sq mi (10.33 kmii) |
• Land | three.85 sq mi (9.97 kmtwo) |
• H2o | 0.fourteen sq mi (0.36 kmtwo) 2.54% |
• Urban | 35.35 sq mi (91.55 kmii) |
Meridian | 344 ft (105 one thousand) |
Population (2010) | |
• City | 14,700 |
• Approximate (2019)[3] | fourteen,262 |
• Density | iii,703.45/sq mi (1,430.08/kmtwo) |
• Metro | 128,774 |
Time zone | UTC−5 (EST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−4 (EDT) |
ZIP codes | 12801, 12804 |
Surface area code(s) | 518, 838 |
FIPS lawmaking | 36-29333 |
GNIS characteristic ID | 0951223 |
Website | http://world wide web.cityofglensfalls.com |
Glens Falls is a city in Warren Canton, New York, U.s. and is the primal city of the Glens Falls Metropolitan Statistical Expanse.[4] The population was xiv,700 at the 2010 census.[5] The name was given by Colonel Johannes Glen, the falls referring to a large waterfall in the Hudson River at the southern terminate of the city.[6]
Glens Falls is a city in the southeastern corner of Warren Canton, surrounded past the town of Queensbury to the north, east, and west, and by the Hudson River and Saratoga County to the south. Glens Falls is known every bit "Hometown UsaA.", a title Expect Magazine gave it in 1944. The city has also referred to itself as the "Empire City."[7]
History [edit]
Every bit a halfway point between Fort Edward and Fort William Henry, the falls was the site of several battles during the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War. The then-hamlet was mostly destroyed by fire twice during the latter conflict, forcing the Quakers to abandon the settlement until the state of war ended in 1783. Fire also ravaged the village in 1864, 1884, and 1902.[7]
The area was originally called Chepontuc (Iroquois; "difficult identify to go around"), also referred to as the "Bang-up Carrying Place," simply was renamed "The Corners" by European-American settlers.[7] In 1766 it was renamed Wing's Falls for Abraham Wing – the leader of the group of Quakers who established the permanent settlement – and for the falls on the Hudson River. Wing'southward claim to the proper name of the falls and the village was transferred to Colonel Johannes Glen of Schenectady in 1788, either on collection of a debt, equally a event of a game of cards, or in exchange for hosting a political party for mutual friends, depending on which local legend is believed.[6] [seven] [eight] Colonel Glen inverse the proper name to "Glen's Falls," though it was often printed with varying spelling such as "Glenn's," or "Glens". The spelling "Glens Falls" came to be the mutual usage.[vi]
A mail part was established in 1808.[7] Glens Falls became an incorporated village in 1839,[7] and was re-incorporated in 1874 and 1887,[ citation needed ] expanding the hamlet to what would become the city limits[9] when the state legislature granted the city charter in 1908,[nine] at which fourth dimension the metropolis became contained from the town of Queensbury.
In 2003, with permission from Queensbury,[10] Glens Falls annexed approximately 49 acres (0.20 km2) of the town. The state, known every bit Veterans Field[11] or the Northway Industrial Park, is on Veterans Road between Luzerne Road and Sherman Avenue[ten] and is merely due east of I-87.[12] The country was vacant at the time.[10] A thin, 0.five miles (0.80 km) strip of Sherman Avenue[thirteen] was part of this annexation,[11] to comply with state law on contiguity of annexed land. As a result, the urban center and town share co-own this stretch of highway.[thirteen]
Historic sites [edit]
Glens Falls has two historic districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the equivalent New York Country Annals of Historic places. The Fredella Avenue celebrated district includes a serial of unique concrete block structures. The Three Squares Historic District makes upwards most of the Key Business organisation District.[xiv] In addition, several individual structures are listed, some below. Glens Falls does not have a local preservation law protecting these celebrated resources from demolition or alteration.[ citation needed ]
- Crandall Public Library – While the library has existed since 1893, it did not have a permanent home until 1931, with the completion of the library edifice in City Park, on property local entrepreneur Henry Crandall willed to the library. Charles A. Platt designed the edifice and Robert Rheinlander built it; it was renovated and expanded in 1969. The city completed the edifice's first renovation and expansion, involving the demolition of the 1969 addition, in November 2008.[xv] [16] The library is a part of the Southern Adirondack Library Arrangement.
- Civil State of war Monument – A limestone obelisk at the intersection of Glen, South, and Bay streets, the monument was dedicated in 1872 to honor the 644 men from Queensbury who served in the Civil State of war. Ninety-five names, those of the men who died, are engraved on the monument.[17] Many battles of the war are listed.
- DeLong House – Shortly the home of the Glens Falls/Queensbury Historical Clan and the Chapman Historical Museum, it is a Greek Revival and Second Empire edifice on the corner of Glen and Bacon Streets. A Queen Anne mode carriage barn is function of the property.
- The Feeder Canal – Beyond from this celebrated canal is a hydro-electrical power-institute on the Hudson River at Glens Falls. The canal was created circa 1820 to feed water into the Champlain Canal. During the early on 19th century, the New York Land Canal System was crucial to the development of the land's economy. Lime, marble, lumber, and agricultural commodities were shipped between Glens Falls and the docks at the base of Canal Street.
- Get-go Presbyterian Church – The congregation was chartered in 1803; its 5th business firm of worship was constructed in 1929. It was designed by Ralph Adams Cram in his "presbyterian style" of neo-gothic architecture.[xviii]
- Fort Amherst Road – Located near this road is the site of the onetime Fort Amherst. While the fort no longer exists, parts of the forest foundations were known every bit late as 1880. The fort constituted a block house marking the halfway bespeak on the road between Fort Edward and Fort William Henry at the head of Lake George. This fort organization, erected by the British, was built to secure the colony's northern territories from French incursions during the French and Indian State of war. A restored fort house complex is available for viewing in the nearby town of Fort Ann.
- Louis Fiske Hyde Firm – The heart among a triplet of revival-blazon residences constructed for the daughters of Samuel Pruyn by the architects Robert Rheinlander and Henry Forbes Bigelow, Hyde Firm houses The Hyde Collection, a world-class museum of European, American, and contemporary art. The principal drove is presented in its original domestic context every bit a private collection.
- The Oldest Edifice in Glens Falls – In 1864, a massive fire destroyed most of buildings in the central business district. The oldest building in Glens Falls, in the downtown area, is i of the few buildings in the urban center that antedates 1864. The stone and brick construction at the bottom of the hill was erected circa 1815 and served equally Calvin Robbin's blacksmith store.
- Quaker Meeting House – Built in 1875, the Quaker Meeting Firm, an Italianate building on Ridge Street, originally did not have a heating system.
- St. Mary-St. Alphonsus Regional Catholic School – Formerly known as St. Mary's Academy, the school is on the corner of Warren and Church streets. It is in the neo-Gothic way of architecture and designed past Ralph Adams Cram. The building is listed on the National Annals of Historic Places. Information technology features a Neat Hall with a 2-story stained glass window designed by Henry Lee Willett Studios of Philadelphia.
- A New York State historical marker referencing American Modernist painter Wilhelmina Weber Furlong was placed about City Hall in 2013, during the Warren County Bicentennial. Furlong spent almost a decade at the cease of her life living and teaching in Glens Falls.[nineteen] [xx]
Geography and climate [edit]
According to the United States Demography Agency, the urban center has an area of 3.9 foursquare miles (10 km2), of which three.8 square miles (nine.eight km2) is state and 0.ane foursquare miles (0.26 km2) (2.54%) is water.
The city is on the Hudson River, in the Adirondack foothills, at the border of Saratoga Canton.
Climate information for Glens Falls, New York (Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport), 1981–2010 normals,[a] extremes 1893–nowadays | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °F (°C) | 66 (19) | 70 (21) | 86 (30) | 92 (33) | 98 (37) | 98 (37) | 101 (38) | 101 (38) | 97 (36) | 87 (31) | 78 (26) | 69 (21) | 101 (38) |
Mean maximum °F (°C) | 49.8 (nine.9) | 49.7 (ix.eight) | 65.iv (18.6) | 78.ix (26.1) | 85.8 (29.nine) | 89.9 (32.2) | 91.ane (32.eight) | 89.5 (31.9) | 84.v (29.2) | 74.8 (23.viii) | 66.1 (eighteen.ix) | 52.four (eleven.iii) | 93.ane (33.9) |
Average high °F (°C) | 28.five (−1.9) | 32.eight (0.4) | 42.iv (5.8) | 56.vii (xiii.seven) | 68.1 (20.1) | 76.6 (24.8) | eighty.9 (27.ii) | 78.9 (26.ane) | 70.half dozen (21.4) | 58.2 (14.6) | 46.5 (viii.1) | 34.0 (i.1) | 56.three (13.5) |
Average depression °F (°C) | 7.4 (−13.seven) | 9.8 (−12.3) | 20.3 (−6.v) | 32.5 (0.three) | 42.vi (5.9) | 52.0 (11.ane) | 56.seven (thirteen.7) | 55.one (12.eight) | 46.4 (viii.0) | 35.i (1.7) | 27.3 (−2.6) | 16.0 (−viii.9) | 33.5 (0.eight) |
Mean minimum °F (°C) | −xvi.5 (−26.9) | −13.4 (−25.ii) | −0.nine (−18.3) | 20.0 (−6.vii) | 29.v (−one.4) | 39.0 (3.ix) | 46.five (eight.1) | 42.ix (6.1) | 32.8 (0.four) | 22.2 (−five.4) | 12.5 (−10.viii) | −5.5 (−20.8) | −xx.5 (−29.2) |
Record low °F (°C) | −36 (−38) | −32 (−36) | −24 (−31) | iii (−16) | 20 (−7) | 32 (0) | 32 (0) | 31 (−1) | 24 (−4) | 15 (−9) | −vii (−22) | −34 (−37) | −36 (−38) |
Average precipitation inches (mm) | 2.86 (73) | 2.08 (53) | 2.94 (75) | 3.00 (76) | 3.61 (92) | three.55 (90) | 4.09 (104) | three.68 (93) | iii.38 (86) | 3.51 (89) | three.31 (84) | three.05 (77) | 39.06 (992) |
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) | 11.6 | nine.4 | ten.7 | xi.3 | 12.half dozen | 12.0 | 11.0 | 10.ix | 9.three | ten.8 | 11.4 | 11.iii | 132.iii |
Source: NOAA[21] [22] |
- ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1981 to 2010.
Demographics [edit]
Historical population | |||
---|---|---|---|
Demography | Pop. | %± | |
1850 | 2,717 | — | |
1860 | 3,780 | 39.1% | |
1870 | 4,500 | 19.0% | |
1880 | 4,900 | 8.nine% | |
1890 | ix,509 | 94.one% | |
1900 | 12,613 | 32.half-dozen% | |
1910 | xv,243 | 20.9% | |
1920 | xvi,638 | 9.2% | |
1930 | xviii,531 | 11.iv% | |
1940 | 18,836 | 1.6% | |
1950 | nineteen,610 | iv.1% | |
1960 | 18,580 | −5.3% | |
1970 | 17,222 | −seven.iii% | |
1980 | 15,897 | −7.seven% | |
1990 | xv,023 | −5.5% | |
2000 | 14,354 | −4.5% | |
2010 | xiv,700 | 2.4% | |
2020 (est.) | 14,830 | [iii] | 0.9% |
sources:[23] [24] |
As of the census of 2010, in that location were xiv,707 people, 6,548 households, and 3,529 families residing in the city. The population density was 3685.97 inhabitants per square mile (1423.72/kmii). At that place were seven,112 housing units at an boilerplate density of 1782.46 per square mile (688.48/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 94.7% White, 1.viii% African American, 0.3% Native American, 0.6% Asian, 0.4% from other races, and 2.3% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 2.3% of the population.[5]
In that location were 6,548 households, out of which 26.0% had children nether the age of 18 living with them, 34.0% were married couples living together, 14.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 46.1% were non-families. 36.ii% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The boilerplate household size was 2.22 and the average family unit size was 2.91.[5]
In the city, the population was spread out, with 24.three% nether the age of 20, 6.viii% from 20 to 24, 29.v% from 25 to 44, 27.1% from 45 to 64, and 12.5% who were 65 years of historic period or older. The median age was 37.6 years. For every 100 females, there were 94.three males. For every 100 females age 20 and over, there were 90.9 males.[v]
The median income for a household in the city was estimated for 2016 at $46,305, and the median income for a family unit at $lx,545. Males had a median income of $41,993 versus $37,988 for females. About 12.half dozen% of families and sixteen% of the population were below the poverty line, including 23.9% of those under age eighteen and eight% of those historic period 65 or over.[5]
Finance and manufacture [edit]
The Glens Falls region is a major producer of medical devices. Glens Falls is home to Navilyst Medical, a medical device maker, previously a regional office of Pfizer and Boston Scientific Corporation.[25] [26] Glens Falls is also a master provider of medical services for a vast 2,600-square-mile (half-dozen,700 kmtwo) region from Saratoga Canton to the s, extending northward to the fundamental Adirondacks. These services are centered around the Glens Falls Hospital, a 410-bed facility downtown.[27] Founded in the summertime of 1897 past a group of twelve local physicians, the Glens Falls Infirmary was meant to serve the entire Upper Hudson River Valley. Solomon A. Parks donated his home in Glens Falls for the original hospital. The present construction has been extensively modified, enlarged, and modernized several times to ameliorate serve the needs of the community, and it is the region's fast-response trauma center.[28] The infirmary is now the area'south biggest employer.[29] A VA outpatient facility serves veterans' medical needs.[xxx]
Danfloss Flomatic Corporation is headquartered on Pruyn'south Island in Glens Falls. The company is a leading manufacturer of industrial and municipal valves. Also on Pruyn'south Island is Umicore, a Belgium-based company manufacturing silver-based contact materials.[31]
Finch Paper LLC, headquartered at the base of operations of Glen Street hill, is a major regional employer and a manufacturer of specialty paper and wood products. Information technology is by far the largest taxpayer in the City of Glens Falls, owning property assessed at $60-meg in 2006, according to city records. In mid-June 2007, Finch Pruyn & Company announced it had sold all of its assets, including 161,000 acres (652 kmii) of forestland in the Adirondacks, to Atlas Holdings of Greenwich, Conn. The Company proper noun was and then changed to Finch Paper LLC. Atlas then sold all of the forestland to The Nature Conservancy.
The Glens Falls Cement visitor, established 1893,[32] is at present a part of Lehigh Northeast, itself a sectionalization of HeidelbergCement, one of the earth's largest cement producers.
Glens Falls has an old and prevalent history in the region'southward finance sector. Pointer Financial Corporation, headquartered downtown, is a publicly traded multi-bank holding company for Glens Falls National Bank & Trust Company (1851) and Saratoga National Banking company and Trust Visitor. Evergreen Bank, N.A., formerly the Start National Bank of Glens Falls, originated in 1853, and is now owned by banking conglomerate TD Banknorth. Advantage Capital Partners, a venture capital letter firm, has its New York offices downtown.[33]
Civilisation, media and amusement [edit]
Arts and theater [edit]
The Greater Glens Falls area has a rich history of theatrical productions. The 300-seat Charles R. Forest Theater is abode to the Adirondack Theater Festival (ATF), a professional non-profit summer theatre presenting new and contemporary plays and musicals.[34] In add-on to ATF, the Wood Theater provides numerous creative and cultural presentations throughout the twelvemonth. This theater opened in 2003 on Glen Street, in the heart of Glens Falls. A former Woolworth store, it now introduces civilization and theater into the surrounding community. The theater is named for Mr. Forest, a successful local entrepreneur and founder of The Great Escape theme park, in Queensbury. The Glens Falls Community Theatre has produced theatrical productions in Glens Falls for nearly 75 years.[35]
The Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Council (LARAC) promotes the arts in the Glens Falls region, hosting an annual arts festival and maintaining a gallery open twelvemonth-circular at the Lapham Carriage House adjacent to City Park.[36]
Music in Glens Falls is highlighted by the city'southward professional orchestra, the Glens Falls Symphony, which has been performing classical repertoire for 30 years.[37] The orchestra is under the direction of Maestro Charles Peltz. From 1965 through 1997, Glens Falls was dwelling to the Lake George Opera Festival, a professional company that staged several productions each summer. The company moved to nearby Saratoga Springs and is now Opera Saratoga.[38]
Glens Falls has three museums. The Hyde Collection is a world grade European and American art collection situated in its original habitation context with modernistic gallery spaces. The Chapman Historical Museum is operated by the Glens Falls/Queensbury Historical Clan and offers local history exhibits, educational programs, and tours of the historic DeLong Firm. The Earth Awareness Children's Museum is a children's museum focused on cultural diversity.
Art in the Public Heart (APE) is a not-turn a profit arts organization. Its mission is to cultivate a partnership between the area arts community and local businesses, to promote established and emerging artists and local commerce, and to create greater access to the arts through cultural activities and public exhibitions. APE programs include the Third Thursday Glens Falls Fine art Walk, Outdoor Picture palace, Gallery 99, Art Cart, and Chalk Fest. Third Thursday events take identify on the third Thursday of each month May through October at approximately 20 traditional and not-traditional venues downtown.[39]
The Shirt Factory Arts and Healing Center is a historic shirt factory that now houses artists' studios, shops, galleries, healing arts and services. More l artists and 13 shops and galleries are in this building at the corner of Lawrence and Cooper Streets. The building was constructed in the early 1900s by architect Ephraim Potter, and is open to the public on a regular footing. The tenants hold yearly open houses, and a celebration of things locally made chosen LocalFest: Stuff Made Here is held every September.[xl]
Glens Falls is also home of the Glens Falls September 11 Memorial, on the May Street side of the Glens Falls Burn Department headquarters at 134 Ridge Street. The memorial is a tribute to the lives lost on that twenty-four hours likewise as a tribute to all first responders involved in rescue efforts at the Earth Merchandise Center and the Pentagon. The memorial consists of 12 pes, solid granite towers resembling the trade center encompassed by granite walls to resemble the Pentagon. It also incorporates a piece of steel from the World Merchandise Centre on permanent loan from the NY/NJ Port Authorisation.
Print [edit]
The Post-Star is a daily newspaper printed in Glens Falls with a apportionment of approximately 27,000 (30,000 on Sundays).[41] The paper covers Glens Falls and Saratoga too every bit the surrounding towns and counties of Warren, Saratoga and Washington. Established in 1895, it has been published since 1909.[42] Writer Mark Mahoney won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in Journalism (Editorial Writing) for his editorials on local government secrecy.[43] [44]
The Chronicle is a free weekly paper with a summer distribution up to 37,000. Apportionment at other times of the year ranges from 27,000 to 31,000. Established in 1980, founder Mark Frost remains The Chronicle 's publisher and editor.[45]
Radio [edit]
AM [edit]
- WMML/1230
- WWSC/1450
FM [edit]
- WLJH/90.seven
- WGFR/92.seven
- WBLN-LP/104.9
Idiot box [edit]
Glens Falls is part of the Albany/Schenectady/Troy tv set market. Ane low-powered station originates from Glens Falls, WNCE-CD (Telly-31), dissemination from its studios on Glen Street in downtown. Offer a multifariousness of locally produced programs, the station'south signature show is a weeknight news plan, chosen North News 8.
Sports [edit]
Glens Falls has a tradition of minor league hockey. The highly successful Adirondack Red Wings, four-fourth dimension Calder Cup champions of the American Hockey League, played in the city from 1979 to 1999. When the parent Detroit Reddish Wings disbanded the franchise, it was replaced past the Adirondack IceHawks of the United Hockey League, which was renamed "Frostbite" in 2004 earlier it folded in 2006. From 2009 to 2014, the city was the home to the AHL's Adirondack Phantoms, the principal farm team of the Philadelphia Flyers. On May 16, 2014, the Calgary Flames announced the Adirondack Flames would exist their AHL affiliate. The Flames played one season before the AHL underwent a large realignment before the 2015–16 season and the Calgary Flames moved their AHL team to Stockton, California (renamed to Stockton Heat) and moved their ECHL squad to Glens Falls, chosen the Adirondack Thunder.
Glens Falls' E Field is home to the Glens Falls Greenjackets of the Empire Football League. The Greenjackets started in 1928 and is the 2nd oldest-agile semi-pro football team in the state. The Greenjackets are 2008 & 2009 NAFL Empire Sectionalisation Champions (10–0) and the 2009 NAFL Northward Atlantic Region Champions (14–0), and finished the season at 14–i as the NAFL Eastern Conference Runners-up, 2009 NAFL Aristocracy eight.[46]
The city is too abode to the Glens Falls Dragons, a baseball game squad playing in the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League, a collegiate summertime baseball league.[47] Since the squad'due south inception in 2003[48] it has played at East Field.[49]
Literary and pic references [edit]
- The 1982 flick Basket Case was partially filmed in Glens Falls.[50]
- In 2007, the movie Love Conquers Paul was filmed at various location in Glens Falls.[51]
- Glens Falls and the natural formation of the boulder below it served as inspiration to James Fenimore Cooper in his historical novel The Last of the Mohicans.[52]
- Julia Spencer-Fleming'due south mystery novels are set in fictional Millers Kill, New York in the Glens Falls area.
- Ian Fleming's novel The Spy Who Loved Me features scenes in Glens Falls.
- In The Witch of Hebron (2010) by James Howard Kunstler, several characters visit Glens Falls.
- The Rick Bass short story "Field Events", which appears in his 1994 drove Platte River, is set in Glens Falls.
- Glens Falls is mentioned in Infinite Jest, by David Foster Wallace, as a city bordering a nuclear wasteland known as "The Smashing Concavity."[53]
- Christopher Baldwin created a graphic novel[54] on the creative and historical resource of Glens Falls.
Recreation and sports facilities [edit]
Glens Falls operates two public parks, most prominently Urban center Park and Crandall Park. City Park provides green space in the Metropolis's concern district and contains the public library. Crandall Park has a lowland pond, war monuments and recreation facilities bordering the city's Coles' Forest International Ski Trail system over the northern edge with Queensbury. There are besides many neighborhood playgrounds including The Murray Street Playground, the Mohican Street Playground, the E Field Playground, Haviland'south Cove, the Montcalm Street Playground, and the Sagamore Street Playground.[ citation needed ]
The Glens Falls Civic Center[55] opened in 1979 and hosts sports and amusement events in downtown Glens Falls; information technology includes an arena for sporting events, concerts, family activities, dance, theater and merchandise shows every bit well as feast facilities. The Civic Centre includes iv,806 permanent loonshit seats focused on an water ice hockey/basketball game-blazon arena, merely information technology can arrange upward to seven,800 people for concerts and other events. The arena is the habitation to the ECHL's Adirondack Thunder.[ commendation needed ] The facility was renamed Cool Insuring Arena in 2017.[56] [57]
East Field is on the city's eastward side and is home to the Glens Falls Dragons, of the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League; the Greenjackets semi-pro football squad, the 2d oldest football game team in America formed in 1928; and the Glens Falls High Schoolhouse Indians. It was home to the Glens Falls White Sox and Glens Falls Tigers of the Eastern League, the Glens Falls Redbirds of the New York–Penn League and the Adirondack Lumberjacks of the Northeast League/Northern League East.[ commendation needed ]
The Glens Falls Tennis and Swim Club is a individual membership order offering recreational and contest lawn tennis since 1965 at the city's eastern border in the town of Queensbury.[58]
Transportation [edit]
- Air
Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport (IATA: GFL, ICAO: KGFL) in Queensbury, formerly the Warren Canton Airport, provides convenient admission to the Glens Falls region for modest and charter aircraft. For major air travel, the region is served by the Albany International Airdrome in Colonie, xl miles southward of Glens Falls.
- Bus
The Greater Glens Falls Transit System, or GGFT for short, provides regular autobus service for the city and surrounding communities. The buses originate at the Ridge Street terminal, across from City Park and City Hall. In addition to the yr-round buses, the arrangement operates seasonal trolleys to Lake George. National service is bachelor through Trailways and Greyhound, which operates a terminal near the GGFT bus terminal, on Hudson Avenue.
- Runway
Amtrak, the national rider rails system, provides service to Glens Falls via nearby Fort Edward in the town of the same name. The daily Adirondack (Montreal-New York City) and Ethan Allen Express (Rutland, Vermont-New York City) serve the station.
- Road
Interstate 87 – Bypassing Glens Falls to the west, the highway usually known to locals every bit the Adirondack Northway has iii exits serving Glens Falls. Get out 17N uses U.S. Route ix, and travels to Glens Falls via Southward Glens Falls. Get out xviii uses Master Street (Warren County Route 28), and is the exit recommended on guide signs for downtown and infirmary access. It too accesses the West Glens Falls section of Queensbury. Exit nineteen uses New York Road 254 northwest of the urban center, with access to the northern portions of the metropolis via Glen St./Road 9, Bay Rd., and Ridge Rd./Route 9L.
U.S. Route 9 – Known as Glen Street throughout Glens Falls. Enters Glens Falls from the south on the Cooper'due south Cavern Span, crossing the Hudson River from South Glens Falls. Runs through the cardinal business organisation district northward into Queensbury. This is a historically pregnant corridor, in one case a plank stagecoach price road to Lake George, and prior to that the military machine road during the French and Indian State of war connecting Fort Edward and Fort William Henry.
New York Road 32 enters with U.S. Route 9 from the south via the Cooper's Cave Bridge, so leaves Route 9 at Centennial Circle every bit it turns to the east on Warren Street. The road leaves Glens Falls to the e in the industrial district of the city, connecting the city with nearby Hudson Falls and Fort Edward. Truck traffic may bypass the downtown traffic and Centennial Circumvolve via Oakland Street, which is designated Truck New York Route 32.
New York Road 9L starts at the intersection of U.Southward. Route 9 and New York State Route 32 at Centennial Circle, and travels northeast towards the boondocks of Queensbury. The route is known equally Ridge Street, becoming Ridge Road at the city line.
Glens Falls has a radial street design originating from its colonial settlement.
Schools and educational activity [edit]
The city falls within 2 schoolhouse districts, both of which are fully independent of the city regime.[59] The majority of the city falls inside the Glens Falls City School District,[ citation needed ] which includes parts of the boondocks of Queensbury.[60]
The Glens Falls City School Commune operates Glens Falls High School, a heart school and four neighborhood elementary schools (Sanford Street School, Big Cross School, Jackson Heights Schoolhouse and Kensington Road Unproblematic Schoolhouse).[61] Sanford Street School was closed at the terminate of the 2010–2011 school yr.[62]
All GFHS athletic teams carry the name "Indians" (Glens Falls Indians). The boys' basketball team won a state and federation championship in 2019. They were likewise a land finalist in 2003 and 2007 and a state semi-finalist in 1999. The field hockey team was state champion in 2000 and 2001 and a land finalist in 1999 and 2006. The boys' ice hockey team was state champion in 1990 and 1991; it was a finalist in 2000 and semi-finalist in 1989, 2001, 2003, 2004, and 2005. The football team won a state championship in 2016 and 2018. They were too a state finalist in 2012 and a country semi-finalist in 1993. In 2008, the schoolhouse replaced its onetime grass football field and tennis courts with a turf field, concession stand, new bleachers and tennis courts.[63]
The Glens Falls Common Schoolhouse District operates an independent public elementary school, Abraham Fly Simple Schoolhouse, named for a founder of Glens Falls.[64] Saint Mary's–Saint Alphonsus Regional Catholic School serves children in pre-kindergarten through grade eight as a regional parochial school.
Urban center authorities [edit]
Glens Falls, since incorporation as a city in 1908, has had a strong mayor charter. The city's Mutual Quango has six members; one is elected to represent the city at large while the other v are elected from wards. The city is represented on the Warren County Board of Supervisors by v supervisors; ane supervisor is elected from each Common Council ward. Such "city ward supervisors" do not have any duties in city authorities but have all the rights and privileges every bit any other fellow member of the Canton Board.
Departments of the Metropolis include: Cemetery, Customs, Burn down, Police, Public Works, Purchasing, Recreation, Controller, Assessment, Civil Service, Clerk, Water & Sewer, and Buildings and Codes.[65]
List: Mayors of Glens Falls as a city[66]
- Charles W. Cool, 1908–09
- Samuel D. Kendrick, 1910–11
- W. Irving Griffing, 1912–fifteen and 1920–21
- Edward Reed, 1916–20 (died in role)
- Julius Jacobson, 1920 (interim)
- Charles W. Cool, 1922–23
- Charles H. Hitchcock, 1924–25
- Orville C. Smith, 1926–31
- Earle H. Stickney, 1932–33 and 1936–39
- West. Irving Griffing, 1934–35
- John Bazinet, 1940–49
- Milton Grand. Tibbitts 1950–51 and 1954–57
- J. Ward Russell, 1952–53 and 1958–61
- Harry Helm, 1962–63
- James E. Wallace, 1964–65
- James J. Donnelly, 1966–69
- Robert J. Cronin, 1970–77
- Edward K. Bartholomew, 1978–85
- Francis X. O'Keefe, 1986–93
- Vincent J. DeSantis, 1994–97
- Robert A. Regan, 1998–2005
- LeRoy B. Akins Jr, 2006–2008 (died in office)[67]
- John "Jack" Diamond, May x, 2008–2017 (Acting Mayor until election; elected Mayor November 4, 2008 for concluding twelvemonth of term of Mayor Akins; reelected 2009 for a full term)[68] [69]
- Daniel 50. Hall, 2018-present[seventy]
Religion [edit]
While Glens Falls was originally settled by Quakers, the congregations of other early Protestant churches soon followed them. Today, many faiths have places of worship in Glens Falls, reflecting a diverse community. Active churches include:
- Christ Church – United Methodist
- Church of the Good Shepherd – Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- Church of the Messiah – Episcopal
- Congregation Shaaray Tefila – Conservative Judaism
- Organized religion Tabernacle – Baptist
- Outset Baptist Church – Baptist
- Beginning Church of Christ – Christian Scientist
- First Presbyterian Church building of Glens Falls – Presbyterian Church United states of america
- Costless Methodist Church – Methodist
- St. Alphonsus – Roman Catholic (merged with St. Mary's)[71]
- St. Mary's – Roman Catholic
- Temple Beth El – Reform Judaism
Regional events [edit]
- The Adirondack Balloon Festival
- A balloon festival has been held in the Glens Falls surface area, with events at the Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport and Crandall Park, in mid to late September every year since 1973. The event draws upward of 150,000 people over 4 days, and has been named ane of the Acme 100 events in North America. Originally organized by Walt Grishkot, the event is free to the public, and generally lacks commercialism.[72]
- The Adirondack Stampede
- A Professional person Rodeo Cowboys Clan (PRCA)-sanctioned charity rodeo.
- Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Quango (LARAC[73]) Festival
- The LARAC June Arts Festival, held annually since 1972,[74] is considered the first major summer consequence in the Glens Falls region and it draws crowds of more than 25,000. With the juried fine art and craft evidence as its centerpiece, the LARAC June Arts Festival as well offers alive entertainment by regional performers, food concessions by local non-profits, and activities for the whole family unit. It is complimentary and open to the public, ten am-five pm both days and is held rain or smoothen.
- New York State Male child'due south Public High School Basketball Tournament & Federation Basketball game Tournament
- Each March, The New York Land Boys' Public Loftier Schoolhouse Basketball Tournament is held at the Glens Falls Civic Middle. This almanac tradition has occurred since 1981. 2011 marks its 30th anniversary at the facility.[75] The Federation Basketball Tournament of Champions are also held at the Glens Falls Civic Center.
- Northcountry Microbrew Festival
- The Northcountry Microbrew Festival began every bit a clemency fund raising outcome to do good the Downtown Glens Falls surface area. Each year, a different charity is chosen to receive the proceeds. The event takes identify at the historic Queensbury Hotel in downtown Glens Falls.
- Gustation of the North State
- Taste of the North State is sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Glens Falls and features nutrient sampling from over 35 North State Restaurants. This annual event on the final Sunday of September also includes live music, cooking demonstrations and an apple dessert contest. In its 16 year history the event has raised more $500,000 for the Community Service Projects of the Kiwanis Lodge.[ citation needed ]
- Third Th Glens Falls Art Walk
- The Third Th Glens Falls Art Walk[76] artists' receptions are held at diverse locations in downtown Glens Falls in the evening on the third Thursday of each month during the summer and autumn.
Notable people [edit]
- Joseph Bruno – former Bulk Leader of New York State Senate; built-in in Glens Falls[77]
- George H. Chase (1843-1918) - Member of the 1st Arizona Country Legislature.
- Bradshaw Crandell - illustrator and Hollywood portrait artist; born in Glens Falls
- Douglass Crockwell (1904-1968) - artist and filmmaker (Glens Falls Sequence, 1946); moved to Glens Falls in 1933
- John Alden Dix – 41st governor of New York (1911–1913), built-in in Glens Falls[78]
- Laura Don – born Anna Laura Fish at Glens Falls, actress-manager and playwright[79]
- "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan – professional person wrestler of Mid-Southward, WWF and WCW fame, Glens Falls native[80]
- Lisa Eichhorn – extra, built-in in Glens Falls[81]
- Warren Angus Ferris (1810–1873) – explorer of the American W and early surveyor of Dallas, Texas
- George Fitch – member of the Wisconsin State Senate
- Jimmer Fredette – former philharmonic guard for Brigham Young University'south basketball game team and consensus 2011 college player of the year; Glens Falls native[82]
- Ferris Greenslet – editor of the Atlantic Monthly (1902–07),[83] built-in in Glens Falls[84]
- Carlyle Harris – convicted murderer; executed in 1893 for poisoning his married woman
- Lionel Hitchman – professional hockey player, 1929 Stanley Cup champion, died in Glens Falls[85]
- Charles Evans Hughes – Governor of New York (1907–1910), presidential candidate (1916), and Chief Justice of the U.s.a. (1930–1941); born in Glens Falls[86]
- Thomas Thou. Jacobs – Olympic Nordic skier[87]
- Frederick Avery Johnson – Member of Congress, Village President[88]
- Dave LaPoint – retired Major League Baseball pitcher and 1982 World Serial champion; owner of Dave LaPoint'due south Pitchers bar formerly on South Street; Glens Falls High Schoolhouse graduate[89]
- Betty Little – State Senator serving 45th Senate District (includes Glens Falls); born in Glens Falls only resides in Queensbury[90]
- Peter Mahovlich – retired All-Star hockey histrion; was on iv Stanley Loving cup-winning teams; member of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame; resides in Glens Falls[91]
- Barry Melrose – former head charabanc of the NHL'south Tampa Bay Lightning and Los Angeles Kings, television commentator, old co-owner of Adirondack Frostbite UHL squad and sometime coach of Adirondack Reddish Wings AHL squad, both of which were based in Glens Falls
- Lorrie Moore – O. Henry Laurels-winning author[92]
- Scott Murphy – U.South. Representative (2009–2011) for New York'due south 20th congressional district,[93] which includes Glens Falls; Murphy as well resides in Glens Falls[94]
- Algernon Sidney Paddock – Secretary of Nebraska Territory and Governor of Nebraska; United states of america Senator; built-in in Glens Falls[95]
- Dave Palmer – retired Major League Baseball pitcher[96]
- Johnny Podres – pitcher for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers; retired to Glens Falls region[ commendation needed ]
- Edward C. Prescott – 2004 Nobel Prize in Economics, Glens Falls Loftier School class of 1958[ commendation needed ]
- Ed Reulbach – MLB pitcher with the Chicago Cubs during the early on 1900s; 1907 and 1908 Earth Series champion; died in Glens Falls[97]
- Robert Rheinlander – noted architect and designer of several prominent Glens Falls buildings[98] [99]
- Rochelle Saidel - author, activist, and founder of the Remember the Women Institute
- Gerald B. H. Solomon – Usa Representative from New York (1979–1999)[100]
- Kate White – one-time editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan Magazine; identifies Glens Falls as her hometown[101]
Sister cities [edit]
- – Saga, Nihon
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External links [edit]
- City of Glens Falls official website
- City Charter and Code online
- Greater Glens Falls Transit Bus Information
- The Corners: Glens Falls Community History Project at the Wayback Car (archived July 13, 2007)
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glens_Falls,_New_York
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