Toponymies of places in New York's Capital District
The toponymies of places in New York's Capital District are a varied lot, from non-English languages such as Native American , Dutch , and German to places named for famous people or families, of either local or national fame. Also, in the early 19th century, many places in the Hudson Valley , Capital District and points west were either named or renamed after places from Classical Antiquity (e.g. Athens, Cairo, Carthage, Greece, Ilion, Ithaca, Phoenicia, Rome, Syracuse, Troy, Utica)
Settlements
Place Name
County
Toponymy
Language of origin
Year
Notes or previous names
Albany
Albany
Duke of Albany [ 1] [ Note 1]
English
1636
Fort Orange , Fuyck, Beverwyck , Williamstadt
Alplaus
Schenectady
Aal Plats , "place of the eels"
Dutch
Altamont
Albany
High mountain[ 4]
Latin
1887
Knowersville
Amsterdam (city and town )
Montgomery
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Dutch
1804[ 5]
Veddersburg[ 5]
Ancram
Columbia
town in Scotland where the Livingston family originated[ 6]
Scottish
1814
Livingston Forge, Scotchtown, Gallatin
Argyle (town and village )
Washington
Argyllshire , Scotland where early settlers were from
Scottish
Athens (town and village )
Greene
Athens, Greece
Austerlitz
Columbia
Battle of Austerlitz
German
1818
Ballston
Saratoga
Eliphalet Ball
a surname
Ball's Town, Ballton
Bethlehem
Albany
in honor of the religious in the community
English
Bleecker
Fulton
Barent Bleecker, early settler
surname of possible Dutch origin
Bloodville
Saratoga
Isaiah Blood , operator of the Ballston Axe & Scythe Works
English
Boght
Albany
bend of river
Dutch
Groesbeck's Corners
Brunswick
Rensselaer
possibly for Brunswick-Lüneburg , Germany
German
1807
Burnt Hills
Saratoga
Condition of the area at the time the first settlers arrived
Cairo
Greene
Cairo , Egypt
1808
Cambridge (town and Cambridge )
Washington
Cambridge , England
1788
Canaan
Columbia
Canaan, Connecticut
1788
Kings District
Canajoharie (town and village )
Montgomery
Canajoharie , a town, translated as "a washed kettle" or "the pot that washes itself"[ 5]
Iroquoian languages
Name traced to a hole cut out by a 40-foot waterfall[ 5]
Catskill (town and village )
Greene
Dutch
Charleston
Montgomery
Charles Van Epps, an early settler[ 5]
Charlton
Saratoga
Village of Charlton , UK
English
1792
Queensboro, New Robertson
Claverack
Columbia
Corruption of "clover fields" or "clover reach"
Dutch
Lower Manor of Rensselaer
Clermont
Columbia
Clear mountain
French
1728
Livingston Forge, Scotchtown, Gallatin
Clifton Park
Saratoga
Derived from Nanning Harmansen; after he purchased piece of land from Native Americans, he wrote Lord Cornbury to request letters of Patent for Land for said purchase, also stating that it be known as "Your name of Cliftons park".[ 7]
English
1829
Clifton
Coeymans
Albany
Barent Pieterse Coeymans
surname of possible Dutch origin
Cohoes
Albany
Cohos , translated as "pine tree"
Algonquian
Colonie (town and village )
Albany
Colonye ; Colony of Rensselaerswyck surrounding Albany
Dutch
1895
Copake
Columbia
Cook-pake or Ack-kook-peek ("Snake Pond")
Native American
1824
Derived from a lake in the town
Corinth (town and village )
Saratoga
Corinth , Greece
Greek
1818
Jessups Landing
Coxsackie (town and village )
Greene
"Hoot-owl place" or "nest of many owls"[ 8]
Koixhacking or Koixhackung[ 9]
Day
Saratoga
Eliphaz Day, noted lumberman
English
1827
Concord
Delanson
Schenectady
Del aware an d Hudson Railway[ 10]
English
1893
Toad Hollow
Delmar
Albany
1892
Adamsville; chosen by the Albany & Susquehanna Railway in order to avoid confusion with Adams, Jefferson County
Dresden
Washington
1822
South Bay
Duanesburg
Schenectady
Last name of man who purchased the landed
English
1765
Duane's Bush
East Greenbush
Rensselaer
Grennen Bosch (pinewood or literally, "Green Bush")
Dutch
1858
Clinton
Easton
Washington
English
1788
Edinburg
Saratoga
Edinburgh, Scotland
English
1808
Northfield
Florida
Montgomery
State of Florida
Spanish
Fonda
Montgomery
Douw Fonda, settler who was scalped during an Indian raid in 1780[ 5]
Italian
1780
Caughnawaga
Fort Ann (town and village )
Washington
1775
Westfield
Fort Edward (town and village )
Washington
1818
Fort Johnson
Montgomery
Sir William Johnson, 1st Baronet [ 5]
1912
Mount Johnson, Akin[ 5]
Fultonville
Montgomery
Robert Fulton , inventor of the steamboat
ca. 1824
Van Epps Swamp
Galway (town and village )
Saratoga
Misspelling of Galloway on incorporation of the town
English
1796
New Galloway; originally named for Galloway, Scotland
Gansevoort
Saratoga
Peter Gansevoort
Dutch
1792
New Robertson
Ghent
Columbia
Ghent , Belgium
Dutch
1818
Glen
Montgomery
Jacob Saunders Glen, an early settler[ 5]
ca. 1725
Glenville
Schenectady
Alexander Lindsay Glen
1650s
Gloversville
Fulton
Glove factory in the city
English
1828
Granville (town and village )
Washington
John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville
1780
Green Island
Albany
Turkee Farm of Green Island[ 11]
1834
Tibbits Island
Greenwich (town and village )
Washington
1803
Whipple City, Union Village
Guilderland
Albany
Province of Gelderland , origin of many of the town's settlers
Dutch
1803
Guilderlandt
Hadley
Saratoga
Hadley, Massachusetts
English
1801
Hagaman
Montgomery
Joseph Hagaman, founder[ 5]
ca. 1777
Hagamans Mills
Halfmoon
Saratoga
Anglicized from Halve Maan
Dutch to English
1788
Orange (1816-1820)
Hampton
Washington
Cambridge , England
Hampton Corners, Greenfield
Hebron
Washington
Hebron, Connecticut
1786
Hudson
Columbia
Hudson River ; ultimately Henry Hudson
English
1785
Claverack's Landing
Hudson Falls
Washington
Hudson River
ca. 1792
Sandy Hill
Huletts Landing
Washington
The Hulett family
Bosom Bay
Johnstown (town and city )
Fulton
Sir William Johnson , founder
English
1762
John's Town
Jonesville
Saratoga
John Jones, "first collector of the Town of Half Moon"[ 12]
Kinderhook (town and village )
Columbia
Kinderhoek ("Children's corner")
Dutch
1814
Livingston Forge, Scotchtown, Gallatin
Latham
Albany
Former hotel owner William G. Latham
English
Livingston
Columbia
Livingston Manor
1686
Loudonville
Albany
John Campbell, 4th Earl of Loudoun
English
Ireland's Corners
Malta
Saratoga
There was a malt brewery in the town in its early days, now known as Maltaville
1802
Mechanicville
Saratoga
occupation of early residents
1829
Menands
Albany
Louis Menand, founder of the village
1842
Middle Granville
Washington
See entry from Granville'
Milton
Saratoga
Either for Irish poet John Milton or a shortening of "Mill-town"
English
1792
Minden
Montgomery
Probably for the town of Minden , Germany[ 5]
German
Mohawk
Montgomery
Mohawk River
Dutch language
Derived from Mohican
Moreau
Saratoga
Jean Victor Moreau , French general
French
1805
Nelliston
Montgomery
Andrew Nellis, member of the founding family
New Lebanon
Columbia
Mount Lebanon Shaker Society
1818
Newtonville
Albany
John M. Newton, early landowner
English
Niskayuna
Schenectady
Ni-sti-go-wo-ne ; roughly "extensive corn flats"
Mohawk
North Granville
Washington
See entry from Granville'
North Greenbush
Rensselaer
see entry for East Greenbush
1858
Clinton
Northumberland
Saratoga
English county of the same name
English
1798
Palatine Palatine Bridge
Montgomery
Palatinate [ 5] A bridge in the settlement that spans the Mohawk River
German
Philmont
Columbia
George P. Philip, who constructed a dam to power his factory via hydroelectricity , and so doing, built a reservoir in the Taconic Mountains [ 13]
English
1878
Factory Hill
Pittstown
Rensselaer
William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham [ 14]
English
1761
George III named the town in honor of the leading statesman—and Prime Minister —of the time
Putnam Putnam Station
Washington
Israel Putnam
Rensselaer
Rensselaer
The Van Rensselaer family
Dutch
1792
Rexford
Saratoga
Edward Rexford
1792
Rexford Flats
Root
Montgomery
General Erastus Root , New York state senator[ 5]
Rotterdam
Schenectady
Rotterdam , Netherlands
Dutch
St. Johnsville (town and village )
Montgomery
Either Alexander St. John, surveyor, or St. John's Church, an early name for the area[ 5] [ 15]
ca. 1818
St. John's Church
Saratoga (town) Saratoga Springs
Saratoga
Known to be a corruption of a Native American name Se-rach-to-que
Mohawk
N/A 1819
It is unsure whether it means "hillside country of the great water", "place of the swift water", or even "floating scum upon the water"
Schenectady
Schenectady
Schau-naugh-ta-da , translated as "on that side of the pinery" or "place beyond the pine plains"
Mohawk language
Schuylerville
Saratoga
Philip Schuyler , general in the American Revolution
Dutch language
1831
Saratoga; sometimes referred to as Old Saratoga or Olde Saratoga
Scotia
Schenectady
Scotland
Latin
1650s
Taghkanic
Columbia
Older spelling of "Taconic "
Native American
1803?
Tribes Hill
Montgomery
Disputed (see below)
The name comes from either the earlier name of "Tripes Hill", so named because of a female settler who made tripe , or a popular gathering spot for Iroquois tribes [ 5]
Troy
Rensselaer
Classical Troy , from Homer 's Iliad
Greek
1789
Valatie
Columbia
Vaaltje ("little falls")
Dutch
1665
Victory
Saratoga
Defeat of the British at the Battles of Saratoga in 1777
1849
Vischer Ferry
Saratoga
Eldert Vischer
Dutch
1783
Voorheesville
Albany
Alonzo B. Voorhees, railroad attorney
Dutch
Union Depot
Waterford
Saratoga
Derived from name of village
English
1794
Half Moon Point
Watervliet
Albany
Probably from the town of Watervliet, Belgium (then in the Netherlands )
Dutch
late 19th C.
Gibbonsville, West Troy
Whitehall (town and Whitehall
Washington
1788
Skenesborough
Notes
References
^ a b Brodhead 1874 , p. 744
^ Chisholm, Hugh , ed. (1911). "Albany, Dukes of" . Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 01 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 487–489, see page 487.
^ Leslie 1888 , p. 354
^ Grade 7, Altamont Grade School (1946). "History of Altamont" . Village of Altamont. Retrieved 2011-08-03 . {{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Zurlo, Sam (15 April 1996). "Area place names reflect local history and personalities" . Daily Gazette . Schenectady, N.Y. pp. B5. Retrieved 5 March 2016 – via Google News Archive .
^ Masters, Hillary. "Town of Ancram, NY History" . Town of Ancram. Retrieved 2011-08-03 .
^ "Bits and Pieces of Saratoga County History" by Richard Dorrough published in the Ballston Journal . Copies of the original documents in Dorrough's possession.
^ [1] Old Dutch Place Names from www.ancestry.com.
^ "Development of the Coxsackie Quadrangle, New York" . New York State Museum Bulletin (332–337). Albany, N.Y. : State University of New York : 40. 1943. Retrieved 16 February 2016 – via Google Books .
^ "Our Lady of Fatima Church: Delanson, NY" . Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany . Retrieved May 13, 2017 .
^ "History of Green Island - A Partial Timeline" (PDF) . Ancestry.com . Retrieved February 15, 2016 .
^ Sylvester, Samuel Bartlett. "History of Saratoga County" . Rootsweb . Retrieved December 14, 2015 .
^ "History" . Village of Philmont, New York. Retrieved February 16, 2016 .
^ Weise 1880 , p. 90
^ Three Rivers. "Which came first?" . Berry Enterprises. Retrieved 5 March 2016 .
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