Unadilla River

The Unadilla River is a 71-mile-long (114 km)[1] river in the Central New York Region of New York State.[2] The river begins northeast of the hamlet of Millers Mills and flows generally south to the village of Sidney, where it converges with the Susquehanna River, which drains into the Chesapeake Bay,[3] a bay of the Atlantic Ocean.

Unadilla River
Tianadara
Historic marker of the Unadilla River
Location of the mouth of Unadilla River
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
RegionCentral New York Region
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationNE of Millers Mills, New York
  coordinates42°55′57″N 75°01′39″W
MouthSusquehanna River
  location
Sidney, New York
  coordinates
42°19′00″N 75°24′36″W
  elevation
961 ft (293 m)
Length71 mi (114 km)
Basin features
Tributaries 
  leftCampbell Brook, Wharton Creek, Butternut Creek, Rogers Hollow Brook
  rightNorth Winfield Creek, West Branch Unadilla River, Button Creek, Beaver Creek, Tallette Creek, Center Brook, Mill Brook, Great Brook, White Store Brook, Kent Brook, Guilford Creek, Peckham Brook

Most of the length of the Unadilla forms the western border of Otsego County and the eastern borders of Chenango and Madison counties, all in New York. This border made up a significant portion of the Fort Stanwix Treaty Line of 1768. It was meant to establish the border for an Indian reserve, beyond which European-American settlers were not supposed to go. Settlers resented British efforts to control their movements, and continued to encroach on Native American territories.[4]

Branches

The Unadilla has two branches which join at Unadilla Forks on the Otsego-Madison County border.

Tributaries

The Unadilla's tributaries, from north to south, include:

  • Campbell Brook: from the east, near the Skaneateles Turnpike north of Leonardsville
  • Button Creek: from the west, between Leonardsville and West Edmeston
  • Beaver Creek: from the west, between South Brookfield and Columbus Quarter
  • Tallette Creek: from the west, near Columbus Quarter
  • Center Brook: from the west, at New Berlin
  • Wharton Creek: from the east, at New Berlin
  • Butternut Creek: from the east, near Mount Upton
  • Guilford Creek: from the west, north of Sidney

Alternate names and spellings

Unadilla has had various spellings and alternate names, particularly in the 18th century:[4]

  • Che-on-a-dill-ha: Oneida dialect
  • Teyonadelhouogh: Gideon Hawley, Journey to Broome County, Oquaga (Onaheghgwage), 1753
  • Tiona-derha: Guy Johnson's 1768 map
  • Tienaderha: Guy Johnson's 1771 map and Southeir's 1779 map
  • Tianaderaha: Surveyor-General, Simeon De Witt's map c.1790
  • Tianaderha: Fort Stanwix Treaty of 1768
  • Tunadilla: Common spelling 18th century correspondence
  • Susquehannock: Vaughan's 18th century Chorographical Map
gollark: Well, I assumed you could interface with other stuff automatically, but quite slowly relative to its internal workings.
gollark: For most infiniteness.
gollark: Too high latency.
gollark: In 16GB?
gollark: The infinite computing device is unupgradeable as it is a featureless GTech™ cube with an ethernet port on the side.

See also

  • List of New York rivers

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.