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Starting in 1800 with 60,000 inhabitants, the increase has been equal to an average gain every decade of about 11 per cent.; while in the last five decades Brooklyn has surpassed this in her average growth.
Doud in his small barn (c.1808 - 1810). Abel Hawley began to teach children in his log cabin about 1811, but left to serve in the War of 1812. It was not until 1805 that the county's business was cared for in an unfinished building on Onondaga Hill."In 1794, Asa's brother, John Danforth, came to Liverpool with his three sons and established a tavern.Comfort Tyler learned about the salt springs from the Native Americans.
The first school was taught by a man named Captain Connor in his salt works (c.1797-1807). The second school was taught by a Mr.
In 1822 the outlet to the lake was changed as part of the Erie Canal project and this lowered the level of the lake draining the lowland swampy marshes.
The City of New York built a water tank filled from a well in 1831 for fire protection, and after considering several alternatives chose to take water from the Croton River.
New York City's Water Works After years of study and planning, city voters approved the Croton Aqueduct in elections held on April 14-16, 1835, by a vote of 17,330 to 5,963.
1838 "Croton Aqueduct," New-York American, March 13, 1838, Page 1.
1840 "Letter from John B. Jervis," Morning Courier and New-York Enquirer, November 3, 1840, Page 2.
In 1842, more than 150 years ago, pristine water flowed for the first time from upstate reservoirs into New York City.
1843 Annual Report of the Croton Aqueduct Board, Presented, May 29th, 1843.
1843 The mayor, aldermen, and commonalty of the city of New York, plaintiffs in error, vs.
1844 "The Croton Aqueduct," by William Beach Lawrence, from Hunt's Merchant Magazine and Commercial Review 10(5):434-441 (May, 1844)
1845 An ordinance in relation to the use of the Croton Water in the City of New-York, and for other purposes.
1846 Quarterly Report of the President of the Croton Aqueduct Board, to the first of August, 1846.
1847 Annual Report and Quarterly Report of the Croton Aqueduct Board, September 6, 1847.
1848 Quarterly Report of the Croton Aqueduct Board from August 1, 1848 to October 31, 1848, November 6, 1848
1849 An act to create the "Croton Aqueduct department" in the city of New-York.
The arguments of the Court established the principles contained in the sections of the law of 1849, which relate to this matter, and assign the reasons on the strength of which they were drawn.
1850 Second Annual Report of the Croton Aqueduct Department for the year 1850, December 31, 1850.
1852 "The Croton Water -- Its action on lead, &c." from Scientific American 7(22):173 (February 14, 1852)
1855 Report of the Joint Standing Committee on Water, together with an appendix; made to the City Council of Baltimore, September 3d, 1855.
1855 Description of the New-York Croton Aqueduct: In English, German and French, 2nd edition, by Theophilus Schramke
1857 The origin of the Croton Aqueduct in the City of New York, by James B Murray
The Willow Museum, open in the summer, celebrates Liverpool's willow basket weaving industry.The 1857 Gleason Mansion is listed on the State and National Registers of Historic Places.
1859 "The Croton Water Analysis," from The American Gas Light Journal 1(5):86-87 (November 1, 1859)
1860 Report of the Special Committee of the Board of Aldermen appointed to investigate the sufficiency of the charges by his honor the mayor for the removal of Messrs.
New York, July 31, 1860, by Alfred Wingate Craven
1861 "Still Another Break in the Croton Main," American Gas-Light Journal 2:369 (June 1, 1861). May 23d in Worth street, near Church.
1861 Photograph showing installation of the large conduit on High Bridge
1865 "The Croton Aqueduct Board Judgment for the Old Commissioners," The New York Times, July 1, 1865, Page 8. | Also here |
1870 "Croton Water," advertisement from The New York Times, July 20, 1870, Page 6.
One company in 1870 proposed using windmills, but apparently only advertised once.
1871 An act to extend the distribution of Croton water through the city of New York, and to lay the necessary mains to deliver it at higher elevation; and also to provide for the expense of water meters.
1878 Report of the Special Committee of the Board of Aldermen Appointed to Investigate the "ring" Frauds, Together with the Testimony Elicited During the Investigation: Board of Aldermen, January 4, 1878 Pages 180-183: Tweed's testimony on the Navarro water meter
1879 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending March 31, 1879
1880 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending June 30, 1880
1881 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending June 30, 1881
1882 Report and Resolutions on the Subject of City Water Supply and Distribution: Showing the Danger of the Proposed Dam at Quaker Bridge, and Renewing the Petition to Appoint Commissioners to Decide Upon Plans and Construct Works.
1882 Regulations Establishing a Scale of Water Rents for the City of New York.
1883 Report of the Commissioner of Public Works to the Aqueduct Commissioners: Supplementary to His Report of August 8, 1883, Upon Plans for an Additional Supply of Water to the City of New York; and Relating to the Building of the Proposed Muscoot Dam, September 11, 1883.
1884 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending June 30, 1884
1885 Engineering News, 13:285 (May 2, 1885) The New York City Water Company has been incorporated by Charles Spear, James H. Gould, William Ebbitt, Charles Crary, Samuel Carpenter, Joseph L. Liscomb, Chester L. Williams, William A. Sweeney, and George F. Gregory.
In 1885, construction began on the New Croton Aqueduct, an underground tunnel almost three times the size of the old aqueduct.
1886 Water shed of the Croton River
1887 Report to the Aqueduct Commissioners by the President January 1, 1887.
1888 "Bad Work on the New Croton Aqueduct: How Detected and How Repaired," Engineering News 20:280-281 (October 13, 1888)
1890 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending June 30, 1890
The Second or New Croton Aqueduct was first used on July 14, 1890.
1892 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending June 30, 1892
1894 Report of the Department of Public Works of the City of New York for the Quarter ending June 30, 1894.
New York City acquired two other municipal water systems from the 1898 consolidation, including Brooklyn and Long Island City.
1898 First Annual Report of the Department of Water Supply of the City of New York
1900 "An ordinance establishing a scale of water rents for The City of New York," April 10, 1900, from General Ordinances of the City of New York Under the Greater New York Charter
George B. McClellan, Mayor, Showing Work Done in Preliminary Proceedings for Securing an Additional Supply of Pure and Wholesome Water from the Catskill Mountain Region, April 9, 1906
1907 Report to the Aqueduct Commissioners
1909 "Water Tunnel under New York City," Municipal Journal and Engineer 27:897 (December 15, 1909) The Board of Estimates has adopted plans for building a $30,000,000 tunnel in solid rock under Manhattan Island to distribute the water supply from the Catskill system.
1912 Catskill Water Supply: Reports, Letters, Resolutions and Authorizations on the City Tunnel and the Delivery of Catskill Water to the Several Boroughs of the City
1914 Report on the Desirability of Converting the Croton Water System from a Gravity to a Pumped Supply to the Committee on Fire Prevention and Insurance of the Merchants' Association of New York, by James Hillhouse Fuertes
1916 Catskill water supply: A general description by New York Board of Water Supply
1917 "Catskill Aqueduct Celebration," from Twenty Second Annual Report of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society, May 3, 1917
1928 Catskill water supply.
The dispute went all the way to the U. S. Supreme Court, which in 1931 allowed New York City to take up to 440 million gallons of water a day from the river system.
1940 A General Description of the Catskill Water Supply, Board of Water Supply of the City of New York
Beartrap Creek was historically classified as a trout stream in the 1950’s by the NYSDEC. It subsequently became polluted with the onset of increased urban development and Syracuse Hancock International Airport, which was constructed directly adjacent to Beartrap Creek.
1971 The reminiscences of John B. Jervis, engineer of the Old Croton.
1977 "The "practicable" engineer: John B. Jervis and the old Croton Aqueduct," by Larry D. Lankton, Essays in Public Works History 5:1-30 (1977)
1979 "Old Croton Aqueduct," by Larry D. Lankton, Historic American Engineering Report (HAER NY-120), included in Old Croton Aqueduct, New York County, NY at Library of Congress.
1982 The Catskills: From Wilderness to Woodstock, by Alf Evers Pages 590-599: Chapter 78.
Ultimately, the lake was classified as a hypereutrophic system (Effler 1987, Henry et al.
1992 The Old Croton Aqueduct: Rural Resources Meet Urban Needs, by Jeffrey Kroessler
1996). As a result of the growth of the city of Syracuse and the expansion of the salt industry in the 20th century, Onondaga Lake and the surrounding watershed became fraught with pollution.
The sampling site adjacent to Onondaga Creek was in non-compliance 33% of the time in 2009 (EcoLogic et al.
2011 The Croton Waterworks
Highlights of the current remediation plan for Nine Mile Creek include: to remove and manage sediment, place clean material throughout the site, improve channel stability and sinuosity, and develop long-term management and monitoring procedures (Parsons and Anchor QEA 2011).
2014 The Croton and Catskill Systems: Meeting the Demand for Water in New York City by Lauren Robinson, Museum of the City of New York
2016 Rare early stereoviews of High Bridge Aqueduct
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