The Hudson River Maritime Museum 2005 Exhibit
A Tale of Two Ports:
Newburgh and Kingston
on the Hudson
Along the 150 miles of the Hudson River between New York and Albany there
are a number of small cities with histories dating back to the early days
of American colonial history in the 17th and early 18th centuries. There
are similarities and differences in their histories, but all the cities
and villages along the Hudson share a common story of having shipped products
and people by boat in the early centuries of American history.
Port of Newburgh
Kingston and Newburgh are two Hudson Valley cities of similar size with
a shared history of shipping as the dominant business locally at different
times and for different reasons. During the late 18th and early 19th centuries,
Newburgh was the shipping port for farm products from the interior of
the surrounding countryside. Newburgh is located sixty miles from New
York City just north of the entrance to the Hudson Highlands, a chain
of picturesque mountains which come right down to the edge of the Hudson
for a distance of about thirty miles on both sides of the river.
Farmers located behind the mountains had to come north or east to Newburgh
to ship their products to the hungry population of the ever-expanding
New York City. The roads were primitive in those days, and shipping quantities
of anything over the mountains was all but impossible. The dominant industry
in Newburgh until the first railroad arrived in the area was shipping
on the Hudson. Four or five prominent shippers competed for the trade
which was carried on in sloops until the arrival of affordable steamboats
in the 1820s.
During the best days of shipping from Newburgh the wide main street leading
down to the river (now called Broadway) was often packed with lines of
farmers with their carts and wagons full of farm produce or herding farm
animals to be shipped out on the boats and barges to New York City for
food.
Kingston
Kingston, the older of the two cities by some sixty years, having been
first settled in 1652, as opposed to Newburgh's first settlement date
of 1709, was set several miles back from the river on a plateau of fine
farmland along the Esopus Creek in what is now called uptown Kingston.
Shipping was not a big part of the farming economy there until the opening
of the Delaware and Hudson Canal in 1828 brought coal to the area on the
Rondout Creek called Rondout. Since coal was to become the dominant fuel
of the new industrial age developing in the 19th century in the Northeast,
Rondout, the port of Kingston, jumped into existence and became a boomtown
almost overnight. The quiet farming village of Kingston was to change
into the busy shipping and industrial town of Kingston by the end of the
19th century because of the shipping of coal and other products like ice,
bricks, cement, and bluestone produced from the earth and water of Ulster
County.
Newburgh's best shipping era was ended in 1843 by the arrival of the
Erie Railroad into the center of Orange County where the farmers could
go to ship their products without traveling to Newburgh to ship by boat
on the Hudson. This was a major blow to Newburgh's economy, but soon local
businessmen came up with a solution, industry. The new industrial age
involving steam machine power was beginning, and Newburgh joined the steam
age. In 1863 a large coal depot was built at Newburgh by the Pennsylvania
Coal Company bringing the fuel of the steam era to Newburgh on a branch
of the Erie Railroad. From the coal depot also was shipped great quantities
of coal by boat to New York and other ports. Industries from textiles
to heavy machinery were established in Newburgh establishing a prosperity
which continued well into the 20th century.
Of particular interest is the fact that both Kingston and Newburgh had
transportation barons who controlled nearly all means of public transport
locally for long periods in the 19th and early 20th centuries. These families-
Cornell-Coykendall in Kingston and Powell-Ramsdell in Newburgh- were the
most successful business people of their time and place.
The Transportation Barons
Because shipping on the Hudson was the main form of transport for various
commodities and passengers until the mid-19th century, it was inevitable
that there would be serious competition in and among the river towns for
the shipping business. In both Kingston and Newburgh in the 19th century
there arose a dominant family in each place which came to control most
of the shipping and public transportation in their town.
In Kingston/ Rondout Thomas Cornell built a shipping empire consisting
of passenger and towing vessels. After 1882 the Cornell Steamboat Company
was only involved in towing freight on the Hudson. In the early 20th century,
after buying out several smaller companies, Cornell had a virtual monopoly
on towing freight on the Hudson River. Despite the competition of the
railroads along the Hudson starting in the 1850s, shipping by water held
its own until the Depression of the 1930s because it was an inexpensive
way to ship large bulk cargoes.
After Thomas Cornell died in 1895, his shipping empire was carried on
and expanded by his son-in-law, Samuel D. Coykendall. Coykendall and his
sons owned and ran the Ulster and Delaware Railroad starting in. Since
the railroad ran into the Catskill Mountains, a popular destination for
tourists, Coykendall did his best to attract passengers to his trains.
One way he did this was to build Kingston Point Park, a beautiful landscaped
park at Kingston Point which opened in 1896. Coykendall had his railroad
travel out to the Point to the park along a causeway to pick up passengers
for the Catskills who were arriving by Hudson River Day Line steamer at
the Day Line landing dock at Kingston Point Park. For those wanting to
go into Kingston or for local citizens wishing to enjoy the Park, Coykendall
also ran the trolley line which traveled to the Park from various points
in the City of Kingston. Everything was conveniently set up for the visitor
to patronize every branch of the Cornell-Coykendall transportation empire
except for towing.
Early History of Kingston
During the period of early trading and settlement by the Dutch and English
in the Hudson Valley in the early 17th century, trading was carried out
at the mouth of the Rondout Creek. However, permanent settlement did not
occur until 1652 when an Englishman named Thomas Chambers came to what
is now the Rondout section of Kingston. Chambers had left the patroonship
of Rensselaerwyck near Albany for a more independent life with his own
property.
Another adventurer named Kit Davits or Davids, known as an Indian scout
and trader, also settled along the Rondout Creek. Soon Dutch colonists
came to the area, but settled along the fine farmland on the Esopus Creek
some three miles inland from the Rondout. The settlement known as Wiltwyck
grew as a farming community along the Esopus. The Rondout Creek area remained
sparsely populated with some farms. Some minor sloop trading went on.
Wiltwyck (early Kingston) had a colorful history. Conflicts with the
local native peoples whose farmland the Dutch were settling and farming
went on for decades in the 17th century. Treatment of the Native Americans
by the colonial Dutch leaders tended to be heavy handed. Eventually the
Indians rose up against the Dutch settlers in Wiltwyck killing and kidnapping
some of them. The Dutch colonial government under Peter Stuyvesant had
a stockade of wooden palisades built at Wiltwyck for the settlers to live
in and be safer.
However, another "Indian War" took place before the Native
Americans gave up the area. The Stockade area was the nucleus of old Wiltwyck/
Kingston, and is today an historic district, also referred to by local
citizens as "uptown Kingston." Within the original uptown Kingston
settlement area grew in the 18th century a prosperous village with fine
stone houses, a beautiful courthouse, churches, and businesses. Not only
was Kingston the county seat for Ulster County, but it was also the meeting
place of the first New York Senate, the place where New York's first non
colonial governor George Clinton was sworn in and was, ultimately, the
first capital of New York State.
As Americans grew more disenchanted with their British colonial rulers,
Kingston became a center for the local patriot, anti-royal cause. When
the Revolutionary War began in the mid-1770s, despite the formation of
a home-grown army under the excellent leadership of American military
men like the Clinton brothers, and of course George Washington, the British
managed to capture New York City.
The British became aware of the patriot fervor of Kingston citizenry,
and during a naval campaign up the Hudson decided to punish the town.
A fleet of British warships was sent up the Hudson in the autumn of 1777
to take the Valley for the English, and cut it off from New England, also
a patriot area dedicated to the cause of independence and self rule. While
traveling upriver, the British fleet stopped off at Kingston, and marching
from the shore of the Hudson up into the village on the plateau, the soldiers
set fire to every house and barn they found. The citizens of Kingston
fled to nearly Hurley with as many of their valuables as they could carry,
but their homes were ruined and the year's food supplies destroyed. The
British were stopped in their quest to divide New York and New England
at the Battle of Saratoga, but Kingston was stopped in its tracks, requiring
several years to rebuild.
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