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1801
Sackets Harbor is founded
by Augustus Sacket, a New York City lawyer. The Village of Sackets Harbor
is incorporated into the township of Hounsfield, named for Ezra Hounsfield,
who had purchased land nearby.
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1803
Augustus Sacket is appointed
U.S. Customs Officer for the Sackets Harbor District, which extends from
Ogdensburg to Oswego.
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1804
Elisha Camp, Augustus
Sacket's brother-in-law, moves to Sackets Harbor.
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1805
The Ontario Lodge of
the Masonic Order organizes in Sackets Harbor.
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1807
International tensions
between the United States and Great Britain led to the U.S. Embargo Act
of 1807 which forbade trade with Great Britain and Canada. This was understandably
unpopular with local residents, and resulted in widespread smuggling along
the U.S./Canada border. Until this time there had been a very profitable
trade in flour and potash. Potash is an alkaline substance used in the
manufacture of fertilizer, gun powder, and explosives. It was produced
by burning timber from around Sackets Harbor, and was selling in Canada
for $320 per ton.
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1808
Typhus Fever breaks
out among the troops and spreads through the town.
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1810
The brig Oneida,
built in Oswego, is sent to Sackets Harbor to patrol Lake Ontario and enforce
U.S. Embargos and stop smuggling activities.
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1812
The U.S. declares war
on Great Britain. Sackets Harbor becomes headquarters for the U.S. Army
and Navy on the northern frontier.
On July 19 the Canadian
Provincial Marine Fleet attacks Sackets Harbor, but is repulsed by the
guns of the Oneida and a long 32 pound cannon mounted on shore.
-
1813
On May 29 British and
Canadian forces attack Sackets Harbor and are repulsed by U.S. troops after
a lengthy battle. The British and Canadians retreat, but American supplies
are destroyed, delaying American efforts to launch a campaign into Canada.
Several forays into Canada
are mounted from Sackets Harbor, including the American attack on York
(Toronto) on April 27. This attack culminated in an American victory, at
the price of the life of Brigadier General Zebulon M. Pike. On November
11 the American forces were defeated in an attack on Canada at Chrysler's
Farm.
-
1814
Supply boats from New
York City, carrying guns, rigging, and supplies for the U.S. frigate the
Superior, are halted near Sandy Creek, NY by British forces. But
American troops trick the British in an ambush at Sandy Creek and succeed
in transporting the supplies overland to Sackets Harbor, allowing the Superior
to be launched.
The U.S. and Great Britain
sign a peace treaty in Ghent, Belgium on Christmas Eve. The terms of the
treaty call for peace without territorial concessions from either side,
and disposal of most of the armaments and ships amassed during the War
of 1812.
-
1815
The U.S. Congress ratifies
the peace treaty on February 16, 1815. When word reaches Sackets Harbor,
work stops on two unfinished ships under construction, the New Orleans
and the Chippewa.
Sackets Harbor's first
library, the Union Library, is organized.
-
1816
The Presbyterians organize
their first Society at Sackets Harbor.
-
1816 to 1819
The first phase of Madison
Barracks is constructed by the Second U.S. Infantry. The Second Infantry,
under the command of Colonel Hugh Brady, earns the nickname "Brady's Saints"
because they march to church in a group on Sundays.
-
1817
George Camp prints the
first issue of the Sackets Harbor Gazette on March 18.
President James Monroe
visits Sackets Harbor to view construction of Madison Barracks.
The Steamship Ontario
is built at Sackets Harbor and makes the first steam-powered voyage on
Lake Ontario from the village. She continues to serve Lake Ontario until
1832 when she is scrapped at Oswego.
-
1818
The Athol Lodge of the
Masonic Order is formed at Sackets Harbor and meets in the Union Hotel.
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1820
The Jefferson, a War
of 1812 brig designed to carry 20 cannon, begins to settle into the mud
off Navy Point. The ship's skeleton lies there today and has been the subject
of serious underwater archeology study.
-
1821
An Episcopal congregation
is organized in Sackets Harbor.
-
1827 to 1836
Elisha Camp excavates
a canal to divert water from the Black River to supply water power for
industries that he expects to be established near the port of Sackets Harbor.
Elisha Camp's plan becomes know derisively as "Camp's Ditch" and is abandoned
in 1836.
-
1832
Dr. Samuel Guthrie, a
Town of Hounsfield resident, conducts experiments which lead to the first
known use of chloroform.
-
1834
Capt. August Pickering
of Sackets Harbor is the first entrepreneur to sail a commercial vessel
into the frontier town of Chicago.
-
1834 to 1836
The Sackets Harbor Bank
is chartered and its stone building at the corner of Main and Broad Streets
is completed.
-
1837
The Trenton & Sackets
Harbor Railroad Company is chartered. This first attempt to bring a railroad
into Sackets Harbor is never realized.
-
1837 to 1840
The Patriots' War, a
rebellion that attempts to expel British rule from Canada, takes place
in Canada. The U.S. border with Canada, including the Sackets Harbor Naval
Station, is reinforced in response to the rebellion.
-
1838
President Martin Van
Buren visits Madison Barracks. A volley of muskets fired in his honor nearly
results in tragedy when a ramrod, left in the musket barrel by one of the
soldiers, flies through the air like an arrow and pierces the ground near
the President.
-
1840s
The Eighth Regiment leaves
Madison Barracks to serve in the war against the Seminoles in Florida.
The population of the
Village of Sackets Harbor reaches its peak at 4,146.
A two story schoolhouse
is built on the corner of Broad and Washington Streets at a cost of $2,000.00.
-
1843
Cinders from the steamboat
St. Lawrence start a devastating fire which sweeps from the wharves
to destroy forty buildings in Sackets Harbor.
The McKee Iron Foundry
begins manufacturing agricultural equipment in Sackets Harbor.
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1847 to 1848
The U.S. Navy builds
the Commandant's House and the Lieutenant's House near the harbor, on land
that is now part of the Sackets Harbor Battlefield State Historic Site.
-
1848
The New York State Senate
proposes to build a railroad from Sackets Harbor through the Adirondack
Mountains to Saratoga Springs. The railroad, intended to encourage settlement
in the Adirondacks and improve communication between eastern and western
New York State, in never built.
-
1848 to 1849
Lieutenant Ulysses S.
Grant and his wife, Julia Dent Grant, are stationed at Madison Barracks.
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1851
Captain Ulysses S. Grant,
accompanied by his wife and son, returns to Madison Barracks for a second
tour of duty.
-
1853
The Sackets Harbor &
Ellisburg Railroad Company, founded in 1850, begins service. At Sackets
Harbor, the railroad connects with the Ontario and St. Lawrence Steamboat
Company. At Pierrepont Manor, it connects with the Rome, Watertown &
Ogdensburg Railway.
-
1861 to 1865
During the Civil War,
Madison Barracks serves as a recruiting and training center under Colonel
Walter B. Camp.
-
1862
The Sackets Harbor &
Ellisburg Railroad Company ceases operation.
-
1870 to 1930
Sackets Harbor enjoys
tremendous popularity as a summer resort community.
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1875
The Utica and Black River
Railroad opens service to Sackets Harbor.
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1876
Fire destroys nearly
half of the Officers Quarters at Madison Barracks. U.S. President Ulysses
S. Grant decides to re-invest in and improve Madison Barracks.
-
1880
A storm destroys the
building that protects the New Orleans, a ship kept in Sackets Harbor by
the U.S. Navy since the War of 1812.
-
1883
The remains of the New
Orleans are sold at auction by the U.S. Navy for $427.50.
-
1886
Heirs of Elisha Camp
donate land for the "Old Battlefield Park," to commemorate those who served
in Sackets Harbor during the War of 1812.
-
1890s
The U.S. Army expands
Madison Barracks by constructing several new brick buildings and the stone
water tower.
-
1893
The New York Central
Railroad absorbs the rail link at Sackets Harbor, incorporating it into
one of the world's most extensive rail systems.
-
1898 to 1901
The Ninth U.S. Infantry,
stationed at Sackets Harbor, fights in Cuba and the Philippines during
the Spanish American War, and in China during the Boxer Rebellion.
-
1900
A new passenger railroad
station is built at Sackets Harbor to accommodate travelers and tourists.
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1908
The U.S. Army establishes
Pine Camp eleven miles east of Watertown. The post is later renamed Camp
Drum and today Fort Drum.
-
1913
Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Assistant Secretary of the Navy, visits Sackets Harbor to dedicate a monument
at the Sackets Harbor Battlefield to those who served in the War of 1812.
-
1917 to 1918
Madison Barracks trains
officers for service in World War I. As many as 2,500 men are stationed
here during this period.
-
1918 to 1919
Madison Barracks is uses
as a hospital for shell-shocked veterans and other World War I wounded.
-
1922
The "Red Legs," the second
Battalion of the Seventh Field Artillery, arrive at Madison Barracks. The
Red Legs acquired their nickname due to distinctive red piping on the seams
of their trousers.
-
1923
A Citizens Military Training
Camp is established at Madison Barracks by the U.S. War Department to bring
young men together to "stimulate patriotism and promote military preparedness."
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1928
The Sackets Harbor "Civic
Improvement League" is formed by the women of Sackets Harbor to help convey
the history of the village and foster improvements in the village. The
Civic League operates the Pickering-Beach Historical Museum for many years.
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1930
Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer,
Fox, Paramount and Pathe film the maneuvers of the Seventh Field Artillery
and the Twenty-Eighth Infantry on the ice of Lake Ontario.
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1933
A camp of the Civilian
Conservation Corps, a Depression Era mobilization of young men to carry
out environmental projects, is established at Madison Barracks. In 1934,
Madison Barracks becomes the headquarters for ten CCC Camps in the region.
Old Battlefield Park is
given to the State of New York, under the auspices of the Thousand Islands
State Park Commission, by the Jefferson County Historical Society and the
Village of Sackets Harbor.
-
1934 to 1935
The Army's motorization
of the Twenty-fifth Field Artillery replaces horses and mules with trucks
at Madison Barracks.
-
1937
The United States subchaser,
S.C. 431, explodes at anchor off Navy Point, mortally wounding Chief Petty
Officer Steven Kafka, who dies three days later.
-
1941
The Pickering-Beach family
donates its home to the Village of Sackets Harbor for use as a museum.
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1941 to 1944
Madison Barracks is used
by the National Guard, and medical and quartermaster units during World
War II.
-
1945
The U.S. government considers
closing both Pine Camp and Madison Barracks. Ultimately, Pine Camp is expanded
and Madison Barracks is closed.
-
1946
Madison Barracks is declared
surplus property by the U.S. Government.
-
1949
The New York Central
Railroad abandons its line to Sackets Harbor.
-
1955
Madison Barracks is sold
to a private individual.
-
1956
The U.S. Government property
on Navy Point is declared surplus.
-
1957
The U.S. Government property
on Horse Island is declared surplus.
-
1967 to 1974
The State of New York
purchases the Union Hotel and several parcels of land adjacent to the Old
Battlefield Park and implements a program to open the historic site to
the public.
-
1973
The Village of Sackets
Harbor adopts an Historic Zoning Law and establishes an Historic Zoning
Board.
-
1974
Madison Barracks is listed
on the National Register of Historic Places but remains mostly vacant and
continues to deteriorate.
The Sackets Harbor Battlefield
is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
-
1975
The Sackets Harbor Historical
Society is created by village residents to stimulate community revitalization
and promote the history of the village.
-
1976
The Sackets Harbor Historic
Society purchases the Old Bank Building and the USO Building, and begins
to renovate both buildings. Numerous private individuals also begin to
join in the effort to revitalize Sackets Harbor, beginning a movement that
transforms Sackets Harbor and continues to this day.
-
1977
The Village of Sackets
Harbor and the Sackets Harbor Historical Society write an application and
receive a federal grant to re-pave and beautify Main Street.
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1978
The Village of Sackets
Harbor begins work to be designated as a New York State Urban Cultural
Park.
-
1983
The Sackets Harbor Village
Historic District is listed on the Nattional Register of Historic Places.
-
1985
The Village of Sackets
Harbor completes the Sackets Harbor Urban Cultural Park Management Plan.
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1986
The Village of Sackets
Harbor develops a Local Waterfront Revitalization Program to guide development
of the Village's waterfront.
Madison Barracks is purchased
by developers who begin renovation, still underway today.
-
1990
The Village of Sackets
Harbor and the Sackets Harbor Historical Society begin major renovation
work on the Pickering-Beach Historical Museum building.
-
1995
The Sackets Harbor Urban
Cultural Park Visitors Center opens in the Augustus Sacket House.
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1996-1999
Sackets Harbor becomes
represented on the Internet's World Wide Web in an effort to further promote
tourism and a greater appreciation for the historic significance of Sackets
Harbor. The Web Site is Administered and promoted by Ric Letson and is
hosted by Russell Nelson of Potsdam