• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

New York Almanack

History, Natural History & the Arts

  • Email
  • RSS
  • Adirondacks & NNY
  • Capital-Saratoga
  • Mohawk Valley
  • Hudson Valley & Catskills
  • NYC & Long Island
  • Western NY
  • History
  • Nature & Environment
  • Arts & Culture
  • Outdoor Recreation
  • Food & Farms
  • Subscribe
  • Support
  • Submit
  • About
  • New Books
  • Events
  • Podcasts

free

Saratoga County Granges: The Patrons of Husbandry

June 11, 2023 by Guest Contributor 1 Comment

Mock wedding, celebrating Hiley and Mary Jane Armer's nuptialsThe Grange, formally known as “The Patrons of Husbandry,” was introduced to Saratoga County in 1890, twenty-three years after the agricultural organization’s founding and twenty-two years after the nation’s first local chapter was established in Fredonia, Chautauqua County, NY. In the 1880s and into 1890, New York State Grange sent organizers in the field to build up membership. [Read more…] about Saratoga County Granges: The Patrons of Husbandry

Filed Under: Capital-Saratoga, Food, History Tagged With: Agricultural History, Ballston, Charlton, Clifton Park, Corinth, free, Galway, Grange, Greenfield, Labor History, local farms, Malta, Milton, Northumberland, Political History, railroads, Saratoga, Saratoga County, Saratoga County History Center, Saratoga County History Roundtable, Stillwater, Wilton

James Bailey: A Confederate Guerrilla in Saratoga County

February 15, 2023 by Guest Contributor Leave a Comment

Battle of Pea Ridge, Arkansas in March 1862 by Kurz and AllisonThe Civil War claimed more Americans than any other conflict involving the United States. This is the story of how James Bailey, a staunch Confederate once in armed revolt against the United States, found himself in Saratoga County.

At about 5 am on August 10, 1861, an attack ordered by United States General Nathaniel Lyon was launched against the Confederates at Wilson’s Creek, near Springfield, Missouri. The Battle of Wilson’s Creek, in which about 5,400 United States troops faced about 12,00 Confederates, was the first major conflict west of the Mississippi River. [Read more…] about James Bailey: A Confederate Guerrilla in Saratoga County

Filed Under: Capital-Saratoga, History Tagged With: Ballston Spa, Burnt Hills, Civil War, free, Military History, Saratoga County, Saratoga County History Center, Saratoga County History Roundtable

Primary Sidebar

Help Support The Almanack

Subscribe to New York Almanack

Subscribe! Follow the New York Almanack each day via E-mail, RSS, Twitter or Facebook updates.

Recent Comments

  • Nancy Fenn on Albany’s Anneke Jans Bogardus, Indecent Exposure, Trinity Church & The Bowery
  • Pat Boomhower on Historic Adirondack MacNaughton Cottage Being Rehabilitated
  • DonS on Historic Adirondack MacNaughton Cottage Being Rehabilitated
  • Becky Landy on Dr. Bradford VanDiver: Adirondack Renaissance Man
  • Douglas Morgan on Euro-American Expansion Into The Finger Lakes Region
  • Charles Yaple on Poetry: Out The Window
  • Bill Orzell on New Backstretch Housing Planned For Saratoga, Belmont
  • Jo Ann on Avoiding A Repeat of 2020 Election Attacks
  • Charlie Herr on William Seward Webb’s Railroad & Logging The Adirondacks
  • Edna Teperman Rosen on The 1962 Catskills High View House Fire

Recent New York Books

The Witch of New York
styles brook book lorraine duvall
James Wilson: The Anxious Founder
Flatiron Legacy National Football League History NFL
Henry David Thoreau Thinking Disobediently
Prints of a New Kind: Political Caricature in the United States, 1789–1828
The Confidante - The Untold Story of the Anna Rosenberg Who Helped Win WWII and Shape Modern America
Expelling the Poor by Hidetaka Hirota
African Americans of St Lawrence County by Bryan S Thompson

Secondary Sidebar