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The Ferry
From the beginning of settlement on the site of Albany, people and cargoes were transported across the Hudson to and from Albany on small watercraft generally known as "ferries." This feature begins to organize our exposition on the subject. Please be patient as it is very much In-progress
Fortunately, the historical artist continues to dream creatively about watercraft around what became Albany. Thus, he has produced a number of imaginative and useful illustrations that we will employ to illuminate this topic. By the time of Albany's chartering, the ferry seems to have run from the foot of Maiden Lane to an unspecified location in Greenbush. In 1770, Widow Hansen and Thomas Lottridge were granted the license to operate the ferry. Beginning in 1781, recently retired army officer Dirck Hansen (son of the aged widow) held the ferry license. Probably, Lottridge lived in the ferry house on the Albany side while Hansen resided in Greenbush. In 1773, the then newly published Laws and Ordinances defined and more closely proscribed and regulated ferry use. Subsequent maps called it the "Green Bush Ferry" and were showing the ferry house. Beginning in 1785, the city council contracted with Baltus Van Benthuysen to build a new ferry house. Specifications to Van Benthuysen were: a 50x40x10 ft. first floor and a second floor 7 feet high. Eight rooms per floor and four chimneys. In September 1789, the city courncil agreed to a proposal authorizing acquisition of the land needed to open Ferry Street from the Gerry House to Washington (South Pearl) Street. By 1815, the city directory identified two ferrymen - both of whom were Free Persons of Color. Henry Otefield lived near the south ferry at 76 Church Street. Douw Rocket lived on Lumber Street (north side). Musician John Top lived at the Ferry and ferryman John Hugener lived at 5 Ferry Street - although he was not identified as Afro-Albanian.
Because so many different watercraft crossed the river during the nineteenth century, we are unsure when or if the city no longer held to its right to license the ferry. However, the ferries continued as the only ways to cross the Hudson until bridges spanned the river at Albany beginning during the 1860s. Maps from that period show three formal ferries connecting Albany to the east side of the Hudson. Online resources: "River People in Early Albany"; "Albany Ferries," from the Bicentennial History of Albany; Lenore Person on "Hudson River Ferry Service";
posted: 9/10/06; revised 1/23/09 |