Ogdensburg

Ogdensburg is a city of 10,700 people (2016) in Northern New York on the St. Lawrence Seaway opposite Prescott, Ontario.

Understand

Portland and Ogdensburg Railroad

Due to its strategic position on the St. Lawrence River, Prescott-Ogdensburg had a long native history before the first European presence. The initial colonial settlement was a fortress and 1749 French Catholic mission; the French fur trade in that era followed the river westward to reach the Great Lakes. During the Seven Years War (1750s), warriors from this fort attacked British colonists on behalf of the French. After the 1760 Battle of the Thousand Islands, the territory became British; in 1796, Jay's Treaty placed Fort Oswegatchie on the US side of the border. US settlers largely displaced the Oswegatchie natives and named the village Ogdensburgh after Samuel Ogden, an early landowner.

During the War of 1812, the city was captured by British forces; local merchants conducted extensive trade with Canada. Before the St. Lawrence Seaway (1958), Great Lakes vessels would unload grains in Prescott-Ogdensburg for transport eastward by rail. Early railways included the Ogdensburg & Lake Champlain Railroad (later Rutland Railroad) (1849), Rome, Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad (1853) and a Portland & Ogdensburg Railway (never completed).

International ferry crossings joined Prescott-Ogdensburg and Morristown-Brockville until the Prescott-Ogdensburg international bridge opened in 1960; from there, separate railways once joined Prescott-Ottawa and Brockville-Ottawa.

Get in

By car

  • NY 37 runs from US 11 in Watertown through Morristown and Ogdensburg, then follows the river to Massena-Malone
  • NY 812 takes a dog-legged journey from the Prescott-Ogdensburg bridge to Utica
  • Ontario 416 runs 45 miles (75km) north from the Prescott-Ogdensburg bridge to suburban Ottawa
  • Ontario 401 runs from Windsor-Détroit through Toronto to Montréal; the Prescott-Ogdensburg bridge is exit 721 southbound.

By bus

By rail

Passenger trains no longer stop in Prescott or Ogdensburg. VIA Rail's Toronto-Ottawa and Toronto-Montréal corridor services are available from Brockville. The closest Amtrak stations are in Utica-Rome or Plattsburgh.

By plane

A similar situation exists in Watertown (ART IATA). Plattsburgh and Massena.

The closest major airport is at the southern edge of Ottawa (YOW IATA), about forty miles due north. Syracuse (SYR IATA) may be an alternative, but is more distant.

By boat

  • Municipal Marina, 100 Riverside Ave., +1 315 393-1980. Docks for 71 boats, playground, tennis courts, swimming pool, and walking trail. $1/foot.

Get around

Local taxis are G Mans Taxi (805 Caroline St, +1 315 393-3999) and Carry All Taxi (729 Patterson St, +1 315 393-3911).

See

  • 🌍 Frederic Remington Art Museum, 303 Washington St., +1 315 393-2425, fax: +1 315 393-4464. Su 1-5PM; summer: M-Sa 10AM-5PM; winter: W-Sa 11AM-5PM. The Parish Mansion (the former family mansion of local industrialist David Parish) was home to Eva Remington, widow of artist Frederic Remington. The collection of Remington art and memorabilia includes notable paintings of the American West. $9, senior/student $8.
  • Fort La Présentation, Lighthouse Point, Commerce Street. Archaeological site with historic monument and interpretive signs. A local group, the Fort La Présentation Association, proposes to reconstruct and operate the historic French mission fort as a living museum describing the diverse history and peoples of the area. The same group offers historical re-enactments and annual events related to the War of 1812.
  • 🌍 Library Park Historic District, 303-323 Washington St., 100-112 Carolina St., and Liberty Park. National historic district includes seven contributing buildings, the Remington Art Museum (1809–10), Ogdensburg Public Library (1810), Library Park, and the Soldiers and Sailors Monument.

Do

Oswegatchie River in the Adirondacks

Events

  • Battle of Ogdensburg, Feb. 22, 1813. Fort de la Présentation Association and Forsyth’s Rifles conduct an annual re-enactment downtown.

Buy

  • Duty-free shops operate in both directions at the Prescott-Ogdensburg bridge for traffic leaving each respective country.

Eat

Drink

  • The Place, 1612 Ford St., +1 315 393-3080. M-Sa 10AM-2AM, Su noon-midnight. Restaurant and tavern. Wings, seafood, burgers.

Sleep

Hotels and motels

  • Gran-View on the River, 6765 State Highway 37, +1 315 393-4550, toll-free: +1-800-392-4550, fax: +1 315 393-3520. Quality Inn on 14 acres of St. Lawrence riverfront, 46 rooms with balcony, one four-bedroom cottage. Riverside garden and swimming pool, exercise facility, continental breakfast. Gran-View Restaurant with patio, Marco's Sunset Dining Room, event space. AAA.
  • Stonefence Resort, 7191 State Highway 37 (Riverside Drive), +1 315 393-1545, toll-free: +1-800-253-1545, fax: +1 315 393-1749. Motel, outdoor pool, tennis and fitness facilities, volleyball/basketball courts, game room, boat dock and fishing. AAA.
  • Wishing Wells Motel, 1200 New York Ave, +1 315 393-6309. Eight-room motel.

Bed and breakfast

Connect

Ogdensburg's telephone area code is +1 315; its postal code is 13669. A historic post office building at 431 State St. is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Commercial mail receiving service for parcels is available from the UPS Store (2981 Ford Street Ext, +1 315 393-1188) or US2CAN Logistics (120 Chimney Point Dr, +1 315 713-4290).

Cope

Nearby

McConnell windmill, Morristown

Morristown

Small (pop 2000) village opposite Brockville on the St. Lawrence River. The road forks at this point, with NY12 following the river westward through Alexandria Bay and Clayton in the Thousand Islands region while NY37 turns southward toward Watertown.

Hammond

Tiny speck of a village centred on NY37 and wedged between the St. Lawrence River (opposite Mallorytown) and the Lonesome Bay State Forest.

Go next

Routes through Ogdensburg

Watertown Morristown  SW  E  Massena Malone
Ottawa via Prescott ← becomes  N  S  Jct S N Utica via


gollark: ???
gollark: ... did I say it was?
gollark: Even if it actually *is* true that living in an authoritarian regime is similar to living in... well, I guess the comparison is just a "relatively standard reasonably free Western country" or something... for the average non-politically-active person (which is probably the case for *some* authoritarian regimes), that doesn't really make authoritarian regimes okay.
gollark: I mean, authoritarian regimes... aren't very good, I think, even if they can *sometimes* produce good outcomes.
gollark: IIRC China *did* silence people warning about it back in 2019, though.
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.