Feb. 19, 2003
New Windsor steeped in early U.S. history
By Bond Brungard
For the Poughkeepsie Journal
One native son helped lead the Boston Tea Party. Another wrote the
country's first medical textbook. A third became first governor of
New York. And New Windsor itself played a role in the Revolutionary
War.
Originally a part of Ulster County, this Orange County town has 27,000
residents and is home to Stewart International Airport. It also boasts
some famous citizens and a military tradition well over 200 years old.
New Windsor-born Dr. Thomas Young helped jump- start the American Revolution
as a leader of the Boston Tea Party. His brother, Joseph, wrote the first
medical textbook in the United States.
Probably no New Windsor natives are better known than the Clintons --
George, James and his son, DeWitt.
George Clinton became New York's first governor in 1777 when the capital
was briefly in Kingston. He later served as the United States vice president.
James Clinton helped command the invasion of Quebec in 1775 and later
build fortifications near West Point.
DeWitt joined the U.S. Senate in 1802, but resigned a year later to become
mayor of New York City.
In 1817, he became the governor of New York, and helped make New York
City a world center of trade by championing the Erie Canal.
New Windsor served as final encampment during the Revolutionary War in
the winter of 1782-1783. About 7,500 troops and their families were
based at the New Windsor Cantonment.
"Cantonment," said Mike Clark, site manager of the New
Windsor Cantonment, "basically means encampment."
Troops arrived in the fall of 1782 and started building camp. By spring
1783, a treaty was signed ending the war. Thousands of soldiers soon started
getting their final furloughs and returned to their homes and farms.
Today, most of the early farms and forests that popped up after the Revolution
have been replaced by residential and commercial development. The original
village of New Windsor was located along the Hudson River and once served
as a ferry terminal from Fishkill Landing, now Beacon.
The ferry moved north to Newburgh, before the crossing ceased in favor
of the Newburgh-Beacon Bridge.
Development accelerated after 1950.
In the Vails Gate area of town, there's a busy cluster of strip malls.
Another area known as Little Britain serves as the entrance to Stewart
International Airport.
Stewart Field was used for many years to train pilots and became a part
of the U.S. Air Force's Strategic Air Command before closing in 1969.
In the early 1990s, Stewart International Airport opened and made air
travel much more convenient for residents of the mid-Hudson Valley.
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