Chelsea, Dutchess County, New York

Chelsea is a
Chelsea is a small community, primarily residential. A marina is located on the river. Just north of the hamlet is a large pumping station used by the New York City water supply system during droughts to take water directly from the river,[1] since the hamlet is located around the point where the river water becomes fresh enough to drink even in the dryest of times.[2]
History
The hamlet of Chelsea was originally known as Low Point and derived its name from a low point of land extending into the river.[3] It also served to distinguish it from the next hamlet north on the east bank of the river, once known as High Point, now New Hamburg. Circa 1800, Abram Gerow, of Westchester, moved to Low Point and set up a cooperage business. The area was surveyed and laid out into streets in 1812.
The hamlet was called Low Point until the completion of the
In approximately 1820, Cornelius Carman established a shipyard at Carthage Landing, where sloops and steamboats were launched, but it could not withstand the competition with
From 1868 to 1888, Low Point could boast of eight sloops and schooners, including the Fancy, the Henrietta Collyer, the Lydia White, and the Matteawan. Capt. John Pinckney was captain of the schooner Iron Age running from the Manhattan Iron Works.[7] Captain Charles P. Adriance, (son-in-law of Abram Gerow), Solomon P. Hopkins, and Gilbert S. Hopkins conducted a freighting business from Low Point until 1856.[5] In those days, the street leading to the dock was often lined for over a mile with farmers' wagons from as far as Connecticut, waiting to load produce and return with supplies.[3]
A post office at Low Point was established about 1840.[8]
When the Hudson River Railroad was built, the shipment of goods by water from Low Point declined. In 1856, Starr B. Knox acquired the shipyard property and converted the storehouse into a flour mill. With the opening of the
By 1866, the Landing had a post office, school, several stores, a hotel and two churches, serving about 300 residents. The Methodist Church was organized in 1823 and a church building constructed ten years later. St. Mark's Episcopal Church was founded in 1865 by John A. Taplin and thirteen other residents of Carthage Landing, now known as Chelsea, in the
A yacht club was organized in late 1881 for the purpose of ice yachting.[10]
The Chelsea Fire Company, located in the
Historic buildings

The former Chelsea Grammar School is located on Liberty Street. The first public schoolhouse in the Town of Wappinger, it taught children up until high school.[10] It is an intact one-room schoolhouse from the late 19th century, when the hamlet was a thriving Hudson River port. In 1987 it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Its use as a school ended in the mid-20th century when the smaller local school districts of the area were consolidated into the Wappinger Central School District. Since then, the local fire department has used half of it as a community center, and the United States Postal Service has leased the other half for use as the local post office, serving the 12512 ZIP Code.

The Captain Moses W. Collyer House, aka "Driftwood", is located on River Road South in Chelsea, New York, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. Moses Collyer was a riverboat captain on the nearby Hudson, from 1899 until his death on September 22, 1942. He co-wrote "The Sloops of the Hudson", a memoir and history of the years when sailboats were the primary means of getting up and down the river. An exhaustive and complete work that drew on Collyer's background in a riverfaring family, it is today considered the definitive history of that era and its boats.
References
- ^ Dechillo, Suzanne (March 1, 1987). "Drought Proposal Angers Fishermen". The New York Times. Retrieved October 7, 2008.
New York City has had a long- standing application for a permanent permit to operate the Chelsea plant during state-declared drought emergencies by pumping 100 million US gallons (380,000 m3) of water a day from the Hudson River.
- ^ Wolff, Craig (February 7, 1989). "Along the Hudson, a Wrangle Over Water". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2008.
- ^ a b c Glass, Charles B. "Chelsea and its Mill", Year Book of the Dutchess County Historical Society, 1919, p.25
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ a b Carthage Landing Archived March 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Clapp, Clinton W., "Town of Wappinger" in Hasbrouck's History of Dutchess County p.470
- ^ Nutt, J.J., Newburgh, her Institutions, Industries, and Leading citizens, Ritchie & Hull, Newburgh, NY, 1891
- ^ Verplanck, Wm. E. and Collyer, Moses W., The Sloops of the Hudson, G.P.Putnam's Sons, New York, 1908
- ^ Smith, James Hadden, History of Dutchess County with Illustrations and Biographical Sketch, Syracuse, D. Mason & Co., 1882
- ^ "History of St. Mark's". Archived from the original on February 4, 2013. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-7385-7559-9
- ^ The Chelsea Fire Company
External links
- Chelsea Fire Company
- http://www.townofwappinger.us/history.html Archived December 8, 2013, at the Wayback Machine