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Albany, New York

Albany (/ˈɔːlbəni/ (listen) AWL-bən-ee) is the capital of the U.S. state of New York, also the seat and largest city of Albany County. Albany is on the west bank of the Hudson River, about 10 miles (16 km) south of its confluence with the Mohawk River, and about 135 miles (220 km) north of New York City.

Albany
City of Albany
Clockwise from top: Downtown from Rensselaer; middle-class housing in the Helderberg neighborhood; Palace Theatre; Empire State Plaza from the Cultural Education Center; North Pearl Street at Columbia Street; and the State Quad at SUNY Albany
Etymology: Named for the Scottish Duke of Albany, whose title comes from the Gaelic name for Scotland: Alba
Nicknames: 
  • Smallbany
  • The 518[a]

  • Cradle of the Union[b]
  • Cap City
Motto: 
Assiduity[c]
Boundaries of and major thoroughfares through Albany
Location in Albany County and the state of New York
Albany
Location within New York (state)
Albany
Location within the United States
Albany
Location within North America
Coordinates: 42°39′09″N 073°45′26″W / 42.65250°N 73.75722°W / 42.65250; -73.75722Coordinates: 42°39′09″N 073°45′26″W / 42.65250°N 73.75722°W / 42.65250; -73.75722
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
RegionCapital District
CountyAlbany
Settled1614; 409 years ago (1614)
Incorporated1686; 337 years ago (1686)
Government
 • TypeStrong mayor-council
 • MayorKathy Sheehan (D)
Area
 • State capital21.94 sq mi (56.81 km2)
 • Land21.40 sq mi (55.44 km2)
 • Water0.53 sq mi (1.38 km2)
 • Metro
2,811.6 sq mi (7,282 km2)
Elevation141 ft (43 m)
Highest elevation378 ft (115 m)
Lowest elevation2 ft (0.6 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • State capital99,224
 • Density4,635.77/sq mi (1,789.90/km2)
 • Urban
593,142 (US: 73rd)
 • Urban density2,186.3/sq mi (844.1/km2)
 • Metro
1,170,483 (US: 63rd)
 • Metro density416.3/sq mi (160.7/km2)
DemonymAlbanian[6]
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP Codes
12201–12212, 12214, 12220, 12222–12232
Area codes518, 838
Geocode977310, 978659
ISO 3166 code36-01000
FIPS code36-01000
GNIS feature ID978659
Websitealbanyny.gov

The city is known for its architecture, commerce, culture, institutions of higher education, and rich history. It is the economic and cultural core of the Capital District of the State of New York, which comprises the Albany–SchenectadyTroy Metropolitan Statistical Area, including the nearby cities and suburbs of Troy, Schenectady, and Saratoga Springs. With an estimated population of 1.1 million in 2013, the Capital District is the third most populous metropolitan region in the state. As of 2020, Albany's population was 99,224.

The Hudson River area was originally inhabited by Algonquian-speaking Mohican (Mahican), who called it Pempotowwuthut-Muhhcanneuw.[7] The area was settled by Dutch colonists who, in 1614, built Fort Nassau for fur trading and in 1624, built Fort Orange. In 1664, the English took over the Dutch settlements, renaming the city Albany in honor of the Duke of Albany, the future James II. The city was officially chartered in 1686 under English rule. It became the capital of New York in 1797 after the formation of the United States. Albany is one of the oldest surviving settlements of the original British thirteen colonies; no other city in the United States has been continuously chartered as long.[8]

In the late 18th century and throughout most of the 19th, Albany was a center of trade and transportation. The city lies toward the north end of the navigable Hudson River. It was the original eastern terminus of the Erie Canal, connecting to the Great Lakes, and was home to some of the earliest railroads in the world. In the 1920s a powerful political machine controlled by the Democratic Party arose in Albany. In the latter part of the 20th century, Albany's population shrank because of urban sprawl and suburbanization. In the 1990s, the New York State Legislature approved for the city a US$234 million building and renovation plan, which spurred redevelopment downtown.[9] In the early 21st century, Albany's high-technology industry grew, with great strides in nanotechnology.[10][11]

History

Historical Affiliations

  Dutch Republic 1614–1664
  British Empire 1664–1776
  United States 1776–present

Mohican, Mohawk, and Dutch before 1660

 
North Pearl Street from Maiden Lane North by James Eights, circa 1805

The Hudson River area was originally inhabited by Algonquian-speaking Mohican (Mahican), who called it Pempotowwuthut-Muhhcanneuw, meaning "the fireplace of the Mohican nation".[12] Based to the west along the Mohawk River, the Iroquoian-speaking Mohawk called it Sche-negh-ta-da, "through the pine woods", referring to the path they took there.[13][f] The Mohawk were one of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy, or Haudenosaunee.

According to Hendrick Aupaumut, the Mohicans came to the area from the north and the west. They settled along the Mahicannituck, which is now called the Hudson River, and called themselves the Muh-he-con-neok, the "People of the Waters That Are Never Still". This name evolved to Mohicans.[15]

The Mohawks were based in the Mohawk valley and noted for their fur trading and their access to trade between the Iroquois and other nations.[16] The Mohawk became strong trading partners with the Dutch and English. It is likely that the Albany area was visited by European fur traders perhaps as early as 1540, but the extent and duration of those visits are unclear.[17]

Permanent European claims began when Englishman Henry Hudson, exploring for the Dutch East India Company on the Half Moon (Dutch: Halve Maen), reached the area in 1609, claiming it for the United Netherlands.[18] In 1614, Hendrick Christiaensen built Fort Nassau, a fur-trading post and the first documented European structure in present-day Albany. Commencement of the fur trade provoked hostility from the French colony in Canada and among the natives, all of whom vied to control the trade. In 1618, a flood ruined the fort on Castle Island, but it was rebuilt in 1624 as Fort Orange.[19] Both forts were named in honor of the leading family of the Dutch Revolt, members of the House of Orange-Nassau.[20] Fort Orange and the surrounding area were incorporated as the village of Beverwijck (English: Beaverwick or Beaver District) in 1652,[21][22] and the city of Albany in 1686. In these early decades of trade, the Dutch, Mohican, and Mohawk developed relations that reflected differences among their three cultures.[23]

British Occupation to 1800

Albany is one of the oldest surviving European settlements from the original thirteen colonies[24] and the longest continuously chartered city in the United States.[g] When New Netherland was captured by the English in 1664, the name was changed from Beverwijck to Albany in honor of the Duke of Albany (later James II).[27][h] Duke of Albany was a Scottish title given since 1398, generally to a younger son of the King of Scots.[28] The name is ultimately derived from Alba, the Gaelic name for Scotland.[29] The Dutch briefly regained Albany in August 1673 and renamed the city Willemstadt; the English took permanent possession with the Treaty of Westminster (1674).[30] On November 1, 1683, the Province of New York was split into counties, with Albany County being the largest. At that time the county included all of present New York State north of Dutchess and Ulster Counties in addition to present-day Bennington County, Vermont, theoretically stretching west to the Pacific Ocean;[31][32] Albany became the county seat.[33] Albany was formally chartered as a municipality by provincial Governor Thomas Dongan on July 22, 1686. The Dongan Charter was virtually identical in content to the charter awarded to the city of New York three months earlier.[34] Dongan created Albany as a strip of land 1 mile (1.6 km) wide and 16 miles (26 km) long.[35] Over the years Albany would lose much of the land to the west and annex land to the north and south. At this point, Albany had a population of about 500 people.[36]

In 1754, representatives of seven British North American colonies met in the Stadt Huys, Albany's city hall, for the Albany Congress; Benjamin Franklin of Pennsylvania presented the Albany Plan of Union there, which was the first formal proposal to unite the colonies.[37] Although it was never adopted by Parliament, it was an important precursor to the United States Constitution.[38][i] The same year, the French and Indian War, the fourth in a series of wars dating back to 1689, began. It ended in 1763 with French defeat, resolving a situation that had been a constant threat to Albany and held back its growth.[39] In 1775, with the colonies in the midst of the Revolutionary War, the Stadt Huys became home to the Albany Committee of Correspondence (the political arm of the local revolutionary movement), which took over operation of Albany's government and eventually expanded its power to control all of Albany County. Tories and prisoners of war were often jailed in the Stadt Huys alongside common criminals.[40] In 1776, Albany native Philip Livingston signed the Declaration of Independence at Independence Hall in Philadelphia.[41]

During and after the Revolutionary War, Albany County saw a great increase in real estate transactions. After Horatio Gates defeated John Burgoyne at Saratoga in 1777, the upper Hudson Valley was generally at peace as the war raged on elsewhere. Prosperity was soon seen all over Upstate New York. Migrants from Vermont and Connecticut began flowing in, noting the advantages of living on the Hudson and trading at Albany, while being only a few days' sail from New York City.[42] Albany reported a population of 3,498 in the first national census in 1790, an increase of almost 700% since its chartering.[36]

On November 17, 1793, a large fire broke out, destroying 26 homes on Broadway, Maiden Lane, James Street, and State Street. The fire originated at a stable belonging to Leonard Gansevoort and was suspected to be arson set by enslaved people. Three were arrested and charged with arson: Pompey, a man enslaved by Matthew Visscher; Dinah, a 14-year-old girl enslaved by Volkert P. Douw; and Bet, a 12-year-old girl enslaved by Philip S. Van Rensselaer. On January 6, 1794, the three were tried and sentenced to death. For reasons unknown, Governor George Clinton issued a temporary stay of execution, but Dinah and Bet were executed by hanging on March 14, and Pompey on April 11, 1794.[43]

In 1797, the state capital of New York was moved permanently to Albany. From statehood to this date, the Legislature had frequently moved the state capital between Albany, Kingston, Hurley, Poughkeepsie, and the city of New York.[44][failed verification] Albany is the tenth-oldest state capital in the United States, but is the second-oldest city that is a state capital, after Santa Fe, New Mexico.[45]

1800 to 1942

 
This 1895 map of Albany shows the gridded block system as it expanded around the former turnpikes.

Albany has been a center of transportation for much of its history. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Albany saw development of the turnpike and by 1815, Albany was the turnpike center of the state. Simeon De Witt developed a grid block system in 1794, and renamed streets that had honored British royalty, using names of birds and mammals instead.[j] This grid was intersected by the major arterials coming out of Albany, which cut through the city at unexpected angles.[48][49] The construction of the turnpike across the state, in conjunction with canal and railroad systems, made Albany the hub of transportation for pioneers going to Buffalo and the Michigan Territory in the early- and mid-19th century.[citation needed]

 
The steamer Albany departs for New York City; at the height of steam travel in 1884, more than 1.5 million passengers took the trip.[50]

In 1807, Robert Fulton initiated a steamboat line from New York to Albany, the first successful enterprise of its kind anywhere in the world.[50] By 1810, with 10,763 people, Albany was the tenth-largest urban place in the nation.[51] The town and village north of Albany known as "the Colonie"[k] was annexed in 1815.[52] In 1825 the Erie Canal was completed, forming a continuous water route from the Great Lakes to New York City. Unlike the current Barge Canal, which ends at nearby Waterford, the original Erie Canal ended at Albany; Lock 1 was north of Colonie Street.[54] The Canal emptied into a 32-acre (13 ha) man-made lagoon called the Albany Basin, which was Albany's main port from 1825 until the Port of Albany-Rensselaer opened in 1932.[55][56] In 1829, while working as a professor at the Albany Academy, Joseph Henry, widely regarded as "the foremost American scientist of the 19th century",[57] built the first electric motor. Three years later, he discovered electromagnetic self-induction (the SI unit for which is now the henry). He went on to be the first Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution.[58] In the 1830 and 1840 censuses, Albany was ranked as the ninth-largest urban place in the nation;[59][60] it dropped back to tenth in 1850.[61] This was the last time the city was one of the top ten largest urban places in the nation.[62]

Albany also has significant history with rail transport,[63] as the location of two major regional railroad headquarters. The Delaware and Hudson Railway was headquartered in Albany at what is now the SUNY System Administration Building.[64] In 1853, Erastus Corning, a noted industrialist and Albany's mayor from 1834 to 1837, consolidated ten railroads stretching from Albany to Buffalo into the New York Central Railroad (NYCRR), headquartered in Albany until Cornelius Vanderbilt moved it to New York City in 1867.[65][66] One of the ten companies that formed the NYCRR was the Mohawk and Hudson Railroad, which was the first railroad in the state and the first successful steam railroad running regularly scheduled service in the country.[67][68]

 
The Albany Lumber District was home to the largest lumber market in the nation in 1865.[69]

While the key to Albany's economic prosperity in the 19th century was transportation, industry and business also played a role. Largely thanks to the city's Dutch and German roots, beer was one of its biggest commodities. Beverwyck Brewery, originally known as Quinn and Nolan (Nolan being mayor of Albany 1878–1883),[70] was the last remaining brewer from that time when it closed in 1972. The city's location at the east end of the Erie Canal gave it unparalleled access to both raw products and a captive customer base in the west.[71] Albany was known for its publishing houses, and to some extent, still is. Albany was second only to Boston in the number of books produced for most of the 19th century.[72] Iron foundries in both the north and south ends of the city attracted thousands of immigrants to the city for industrial jobs. To this day, one can see many intricate wrought-iron details that were constructed in those years on what are now historic buildings. The iron industry waned by the 1890s due to increased costs associated with a newly unionized workforce and the opening of mines in the Mesabi Range in Minnesota.[73]

 
Broadway in Albany during the funeral ceremonies for Abraham Lincoln (1865)

Albany's other major exports during the 18th and 19th centuries were furs, wheat, meat, and lumber.[74] By 1865, there were almost 4,000 saw mills in the Albany area[74] and the Albany Lumber District was the largest lumber market in the nation.[69] The city was also home to a number of banks. The Bank of Albany (1792–1861) was the second chartered bank in New York.[75] The city was the original home of the Albank (founded in 1820 as the Albany Savings Bank),[76] KeyBank (founded in 1825 as the Commercial Bank of Albany),[77] and Norstar Bank (founded as the State Bank of Albany in 1803).[78] American Express was founded in Albany in 1850 as an express mail business.[79] In 1871, the northwestern portion of Albany—west from Magazine Street—was annexed to the neighboring town of Guilderland[80] after the town of Watervliet refused annexation of the territory.[81][82] In return for this loss, portions of Bethlehem and Watervliet were added to Albany. Part of the land annexed to Guilderland was ceded back to Albany in 1910, setting up the current western border.[52]

The train carrying the body of slain President Abraham Lincoln came through Albany on the way to Illinois and some claim the ghostly image of that train remains.[83]

Albany opened one of the first commercial airports in the world, and the first municipal airport in the United States, in 1908. Originally on a polo field on Loudon Road, it moved to Westerlo Island in 1909 and remained there until 1928. The Albany Municipal Airport—jointly owned by the city and county—was moved to its current location in Colonie in 1928. By 1916 Albany's northern and southern borders reached their modern courses;[52] Westerlo Island, to the south, became the second-to-last annexation, which occurred in 1926.[84]

1942 to present day

Erastus Corning 2nd, arguably Albany's most notable mayor (and great-grandson of the former mayor of the same name), was elected in 1941.[85] Although he was one of the longest-serving mayors of any city in United States history (1942 until his death in 1983), one historian describes Corning's tenure as "long on years, short on accomplishments."[86] Grondahl cited Corning's preference for maintaining the status quo as a factor that held back potential progress during his tenure.[87] While Corning brought stability to the office of mayor, it is said even those who admire him greatly cannot come up with a sizable list of "major concrete Corning achievements."[88] Corning is given credit for saving—albeit somewhat unintentionally—much of Albany's historic architecture.[l]

During the 1950s and 1960s, a time when federal aid for urban renewal was plentiful,[87] Albany did not have growth in its economy or infrastructure. It lost more than 20 percent of its population during the Corning years, as people moved to newer housing in the suburbs, followed by most of the downtown businesses moving there as well.[89] While cities across the country grappled with similar issues, the problems were magnified in Albany: interference from the Democratic political machine hindered progress considerably.[87] In 1960, the mayor sold the city's stake in the airport to the county, citing budget issues. It was known from then on as Albany County Airport until a massive upgrade and modernization project between 1996 and 1998, when it was rechristened Albany International Airport.[90]

Governor Nelson Rockefeller (1959–1973) (R) tried to stimulate the city with new monumental architecture and large, government-sponsored building projects; he drove construction of the Empire State Plaza, SUNY Albany's uptown campus, and much of the W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus.[91] Albany County Republican Chairman Joseph C. Frangella once quipped, "Governor Rockefeller was the best mayor Albany ever had."[92] Corning, although opposed to the project, was responsible for negotiating the payment plan for the Empire State Plaza. Rockefeller did not want to be limited by the Legislature's power of the purse, so Corning devised a plan to have the county pay for the construction and have the state sign a lease-ownership agreement. The state paid off the bonds until 2004. It was Rockefeller's only viable option, and he agreed. Due to the clout Corning gained from the situation, he gained inclusion of the State Museum, a convention center, and a restaurant, back in the plans—ideas which Rockefeller had originally vetoed. The county gained $35 million in fees and the city received $13 million for lost tax revenue. Having the state offices in the city enabled it to keep good jobs and retain middle-class residents.[93]

 
This 1955 map shows the planned expansion of the Interstate Highway System around Albany.

Another major project of the 1960s and 1970s was the construction of Interstate 787 and the South Mall Arterial.[m] Construction began in the early 1960s. One of the project's main results was separating the city from the Hudson River, its source of development. Writer Paul Grondahl has described Corning as shortsighted with respect to use of the waterfront. In Grondahl's view, the Mayor could have used his influence to move I-787 away from the Hudson.[94] A proposed Mid-Crosstown Arterial never came to fruition.[95] In 1967, the hamlet of Karlsfeld was the last annexation by the city, taken from the Town of Bethlehem.[52]

When Corning died in 1983, Thomas Whalen assumed the mayorship and was reelected twice. He encouraged redevelopment of historic structures and helped attract federal dollars earmarked for that purpose. What Corning had saved from destruction, Whalen refurbished for continued and new uses.[96] The Mayor's Office of Special Events was created in an effort to increase the number of festivals and artistic events in the city, including a year-long Dongan Charter tricentennial celebration in 1986.[97] Whalen is credited for an "unparalleled cycle of commercial investment and development" in Albany due to his "aggressive business development programs".[98]

Prior to the recession of the 1990s, downtown Albany was home to four Fortune 500 companies.[99] After the death of Corning and the retirement of Congressman Sam Stratton, the political environment changed. Long-term office holders became rare in the 1980s. Local media began following the drama surrounding county politics (specifically that of the newly created county executive position); the loss of Corning (and eventually the machine) led to a lack of interest in city politics.[100] The election of Gerald Jennings was a surprise, and he served as Mayor from 1994 until his retirement at the end of 2013. His tenure essentially ended the political machine that had been in place since the 1920s.[101]

During the 1990s, the State Legislature approved the $234 million "Albany Plan", "a building and renovation project [that] was the most ambitious building project to affect the area since the Rockefeller era." Under the Albany Plan, renovation and new building projects were initiated around the downtown area. Many state workers were relocated from the Harriman State Office Campus to downtown, helping its retail businesses and vitality.[9]

Fortune 500 companies with offices in Albany include American Express, J.P. Morgan and Chase,[102] Merrill Lynch,[103][104] General Electric, Verizon, Goldman Sachs,[105] International Paper,[106] and Key Bank.[107]

Albany won the All-America City Award in both 1991 and 2009.[108]

 
Albany, as viewed from the Capitol looking southeast, c. 1906. City Hall is left of center; the twin spires of the Immaculate Conception church can be seen on the far right; the future Empire State Plaza is located at the extreme right of the image.

Geography

 
City of Albany

Albany is about 150 miles (240 km) north of New York City on the Hudson River.[21] It has a total area of 21.8 square miles (56 km2), of which 21.4 square miles (55 km2) is land and 0.4 square miles (1.0 km2) (1.8%) is water.[109] The city is bordered on the north by the town of Colonie (along with the village of Menands), on the west by the town of Guilderland, and on the south by the town of Bethlehem.[110] The Hudson River represents the city's eastern border. Patroon Creek, near the northern border, and the Normans Kill, along the southern border, are the two major streams in the city.[citation needed] The former Foxes Creek, Beaver Kill, and Rutten Kill were diverted underground in the 19th century.[111][112][113] There are four lakes within city limits: Buckingham Lake; Rensselaer Lake at the mouth of the Patroon Creek; Tivoli Lake, which was formed as a reservoir and once connected to the Patroon Creek; and Washington Park Lake, which was formed by damming the Beaver Kill.[110][112]

 
The Albany Pine Bush is the only sizable inland pine barrens sand dune ecosystem in the United States.[114]

The highest natural point in Albany is a USGS benchmark near the Loudonville Reservoir off Birch Hill Road, at 378 feet (115 m) above sea level. The lowest point is sea level at the Hudson River (the average water elevation is 2 feet (0.61 m)),[110][115][verification needed] which is still technically an estuary at Albany and is affected by the Atlantic tide.[116] The interior of Albany consists of rolling hills which were once part of the Albany Pine Bush, an area of pitch pine and scrub oak, and has arid, sandy soil that is a remnant of the ancient Lake Albany. Due to development, the Pine Bush has shrunk from an original 25,000 to 6,000 acres (10,100 to 2,400 ha) today. A preserve was set up by the State Legislature in 1988 and is on the city's western edge, spilling into Guilderland and Colonie;[117] it is the only sizable inland pine barrens sand dune ecosystem in the United States,[114] and is home to many endangered species, including the Karner Blue butterfly.[118]

Climate

Albany is in the humid continental climate zone (Köppen climate classification: Dfa),[119] and features cold, snowy winters, and hot, humid summers; the city experiences four distinct seasons. Albany is in plant hardiness zone 6a near downtown and along the shore of the Hudson and 5b at its western end.[120] Albany receives 40.7 inches (1,030 mm) of precipitation per year,[121] with 138 days of at least 0.01 in (0.25 mm) of precipitation each year. Snowfall is significant, totaling 59.4 inches (151 cm) per season,[121] but with less accumulation than the lake effect areas to the north and west, as it is farther from Lake Ontario. However, Albany is close enough to the Atlantic coast to receive heavy snow from Nor'easters and the city occasionally receives Alberta clippers.[122] Winters can be very cold with fluctuating conditions; temperatures drop to 0 °F (−18 °C) or below on nine nights per annum.[123] Summers in Albany can contain stretches of excessive heat and humidity, with temperatures of 90 °F (32 °C) or hotter on nine days per year.[123] Record temperature extremes range from −28 °F (−33 °C), on January 19, 1971, to 104 °F (40 °C) on July 4, 1911.[123]

Climate data for Albany International Airport, New York (1991–2020 normals,[n] extremes 1874–present[o])
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 71
(22)
74
(23)
89
(32)
93
(34)
97
(36)
100
(38)
104
(40)
102
(39)
100
(38)
91
(33)
82
(28)
72
(22)
104
(40)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 54.5
(12.5)
54.5
(12.5)
65.9
(18.8)
80.9
(27.2)
87.8
(31.0)
92.0
(33.3)
92.7
(33.7)
90.6
(32.6)
87.0
(30.6)
77.8
(25.4)
67.7
(19.8)
56.4
(13.6)
94.5
(34.7)
Average high °F (°C) 32.8
(0.4)
36.0
(2.2)
45.3
(7.4)
59.2
(15.1)
71.2
(21.8)
79.4
(26.3)
83.9
(28.8)
82.0
(27.8)
74.4
(23.6)
61.6
(16.4)
49.3
(9.6)
38.2
(3.4)
59.4
(15.2)
Daily mean °F (°C) 24.4
(−4.2)
26.8
(−2.9)
35.7
(2.1)
48.1
(8.9)
59.6
(15.3)
68.4
(20.2)
73.1
(22.8)
71.4
(21.9)
63.5
(17.5)
51.4
(10.8)
40.5
(4.7)
30.4
(−0.9)
49.4
(9.7)
Average low °F (°C) 15.9
(−8.9)
17.6
(−8.0)
26.1
(−3.3)
36.9
(2.7)
48.1
(8.9)
57.4
(14.1)
62.4
(16.9)
60.7
(15.9)
52.6
(11.4)
41.1
(5.1)
31.6
(−0.2)
22.7
(−5.2)
39.4
(4.1)
Mean minimum °F (°C) −6.0
(−21.1)
−2.4
(−19.1)
7.8
(−13.4)
23.7
(−4.6)
33.8
(1.0)
43.3
(6.3)
51.5
(10.8)
48.9
(9.4)
37.6
(3.1)
27.0
(−2.8)
16.0
(−8.9)
4.6
(−15.2)
−8.4
(−22.4)
Record low °F (°C) −28
(−33)
−22
(−30)
−21
(−29)
9
(−13)
26
(−3)
35
(2)
40
(4)
34
(1)
24
(−4)
16
(−9)
−11
(−24)
−22
(−30)
−28
(−33)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.60
(66)
2.28
(58)
3.09
(78)
3.11
(79)
3.41
(87)
4.05
(103)
4.55
(116)
3.76
(96)
3.73
(95)
3.85
(98)
2.99
(76)
3.26
(83)
40.68
(1,033)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 15.6
(40)
13.7
(35)
12.0
(30)
1.6
(4.1)
0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.76)
2.6
(6.6)
13.3
(34)
59.2
(150)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 12.7 10.6 11.8 12.2 12.7 12.2 11.4 11.0 9.7 11.2 11.1 12.6 139.2
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 10.1 7.8 5.7 1.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 2.4 7.0 34.5
Average relative humidity (%) 71.1 68.5 64.8 61.2 65.5 69.5 70.5 74.1 75.7 72.4 73.1 73.9 70.0
Average dew point °F (°C) 12.9
(−10.6)
14.5
(−9.7)
22.6
(−5.2)
32.2
(0.1)
45.0
(7.2)
55.0
(12.8)
60.3
(15.7)
59.4
(15.2)
52.3
(11.3)
40.3
(4.6)
31.1
(−0.5)
19.4
(−7.0)
37.1
(2.8)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 141.1 158.5 200.3 218.9 248.9 262.2 289.2 253.2 210.5 168.8 100.7 108.3 2,360.6
Percent possible sunshine 48 54 54 54 55 57 62 59 56 49 34 38 53
Average ultraviolet index 1 2 4 5 7 8 8 7 6 3 2 1 5
Source 1: NOAA (relative humidity, dew point, and sun 1961–1990)[121][123][124]
Source 2: Weather Atlas[125]


Crime

New York has an effective statewide crime rate of 385/100,000 people as of 2009.[126] Albany's violent crime rate is nearly on a par with Rochester (1028 violent crimes/100,000 population vs 968/100,000 in Rochester) and much lower than Buffalo at 1514/100,000. By comparison, New York City's violent crime rate was 639/100,000 in 2013.[127]

Cityscape

 
Panorama of Albany and the Hudson River from Rensselaer, looking southwest

Neighborhoods

 
Housing in Ten Broeck Triangle, a subset of the Arbor Hill neighborhood

The neighborhoods of Albany[128][129] include Arbor Hill;[130] Center Square, "[an] eclectic mix of residential and commercial [buildings], including bars, night clubs, restaurants, and stores";[131] Pine Hills;[132] and the South End.[133]

Parks and recreation

 
The 1929 Washington Park Lake House replaced a wooden lake house built in 1876.[134]

Albany has more than 60 public parks and recreation areas.[135] Washington Park was organized as the Middle Public Square in 1806. Its current location has been public property since the Dongan Charter of 1686 gave the city title to all property not privately owned. Washington Park was designed by John Bogart and John Cuyler in 1870,[136] and opened for public use the following year. The original lake house, designed by Frederick W. Brown, was added in 1876. The park had previously been used as a cemetery; its graves were moved to Albany Rural Cemetery. Washington Park is a popular place to exercise and play sports; skate during the winter; people-watch during Tulip Fest; and attend plays at the amphitheater during the summer.[136][137][138][139]

 
Empire State Plaza
 
Lincoln Park is flanked on the north by the Empire State Plaza.

Other parks in Albany include Lincoln Park, Buckingham Park, the Corning Preserve, and the Pine Bush. Lincoln Park, southwest of the Empire State Plaza, was organized in 1886 and was originally known as Beaver Park.[140] Today, the park has a pool that is open during the summer months. Buckingham Lake Park is between Manning Boulevard and Route 85 in the Buckingham Pond neighborhood; it contains a pond with fountains, a footpath, a playground, and picnic tables.[141] The Albany Riverfront Park at the Corning Preserve has an 800-seat amphitheatre that hosts events in non-winter months, most notably the Alive at 5 summer concert series. The Preserve's visitors center details the ecology of the Hudson River and the local environment.[142] The park has a bike trail and boat launch[142] and was effectively separated from downtown by Interstate 787 until the opening of the Hudson River Way in 2002.[143]

Other public parks include Westland Hill Park, Hoffman Park, Beverwyck Park,[144] and Liberty Park, today a small circular grassy patch in downtown on Hudson Avenue, which is Albany's oldest park.[145] Ridgefield Park is home to the clay courts of the Albany Tennis Club, one of the oldest tennis clubs in the United States.[146] The municipal golf course, New Course at Albany, was constructed in 1929 as the Albany Municipal Golf Course, later renamed the Capital Hills at Albany, and remodeled in 1991.[147]

Architecture

 
Aerial view of Albany looking northeast

The Empire State Plaza, a collection of state agency office buildings, dominates almost any view of Albany. Built between 1965 and 1978 at the hand of Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller and architect Wallace Harrison, the complex is a powerful example of late American modern architecture[148] and remains a controversial building project both for displacing city residents and for its architectural style. The most recognizable aspect of the complex is the Erastus Corning Tower, the tallest building in New York outside of New York City.[148] Juxtaposed at the north end of the Plaza is the 19th-century New York State Capitol, the seat of the New York State Legislature and the home of the Governor's office.[149]

 
This 1789 etching shows the Dutch influence on the architecture of early Albany.

Albany's initial architecture incorporated many Dutch influences, followed soon after by those of the English.[150] Quackenbush House, a Dutch Colonial brick mansion, was built c. 1736;[151] Schuyler Mansion, a Georgian-style mansion, was built in 1765;[152] and the oldest building in Albany is the 1728 Van Ostrande-Radliff House at 48 Hudson Avenue.[153] Albany's housing varies greatly, with mostly row houses in the older sections of town, closer to the river. Housing type quickly changes as one travels westward, beginning with two-family homes of the late 19th century, and one-family homes built after World War II in the western end of the city.[154]

Albany City Hall, designed by Henry Hobson Richardson, was opened in 1883. The New York State Capitol was opened in 1899 (after 32 years of construction)[149] at a cost of $25 million, making it the most expensive government building at the time.[155] Albany's Union Station, a major Beaux-Arts design,[156] was under construction at the same time; it opened in 1900. In 1912, the Beaux-Arts styled New York State Department of Education Building opened on Washington Avenue near the Capitol. It has a classical exterior, which features a block-long white marble colonnade.[157] The 1920s brought the Art Deco movement, which is illustrated by the Home Savings Bank Building (1927) on North Pearl Street[158] and the Alfred E. Smith Building (1930) on South Swan Street,[159] two of Albany's tallest high-rises.[160]

Architecture from the 1960s and 1970s is well represented in the city, especially at the W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus (1950s and 1960s) and on the uptown campus of the University at Albany (1962–1971). The state office campus was planned in the 1950s by governor W. Averell Harriman to offer more parking and easier access for state employees.[161] The uptown SUNY campus was built in the 1960s under Governor Rockefeller on the site of the city-owned Albany Country Club. Straying from the popular open campus layout, SUNY Albany has a centralized building layout with administrative and classroom buildings at center surrounded by four student housing towers. The design called for much use of concrete and glass, and the style has slender, round-topped columns and pillars reminiscent of those at Lincoln Center in New York City.[162]

Downtown has seen a revival in recent decades, often considered to have begun with Norstar Bank's renovation of the former Union Station as its corporate headquarters in 1986.[p] The Times Union Center (TU Center) was originally slated for suburban Colonie,[164] but was instead built downtown and opened in 1990.[165] Other development in downtown includes the construction of the State Dormitory Authority headquarters at 515 Broadway (1998);[166] the State Department of Environmental Conservation building, with its iconic green dome, at 625 Broadway (2001);[167] the State Comptroller headquarters on State Street (2001);[168] the Hudson River Way (2002), a pedestrian bridge connecting Broadway to the Corning Preserve;[143] and 677 Broadway (2005), "the first privately owned downtown office building in a generation".[169][170]

Demographics

City of immigrants

Historical population
Census Pop.
17903,498
18005,34952.9%
181010,762101.2%
182012,63017.4%
183024,20991.7%
184033,72139.3%
185050,76350.5%
186062,36722.9%
187069,42211.3%
188090,75830.7%
189094,9234.6%
190094,151−0.8%
1910100,2536.5%
1920113,34413.1%
1930127,41212.4%
1940130,5772.5%
1950134,9953.4%
1960129,726−3.9%
1970115,781−10.7%
1980101,727−12.1%
1990101,082−0.6%
200095,658−5.4%
201097,8562.3%
202099,2241.4%
Sources: 1790–1950,[171]
1960–1980,[172] 1990–2000[173] 2010–2020[174]

Historically, Albany's population has been mixed. First dominated by Mohican and Mohawk, then Dutch and Germans, it was overtaken by the English in the early 19th century. Irish immigrants soon outnumbered most other ethnicities by the mid-19th century, and were followed by Italians and Poles. In the mid-to-late 20th century, the African-American population increased with thousands of people from the rural South, as part of the Great Migration. As historian (and Albany Assemblyman) John McEneny puts it,

Dutch and Yankee, German and Irish, Polish and Italian, black and Chinese—over the centuries Albany's heritage has reflected a succession of immigrant nationalities. Its streets have echoed with a dozen languages, its neighborhoods adapting to the distinctive life-style and changing economic fortunes of each new group.[175]

Until after the Revolution, Albany's population consisted mostly of ethnic Dutch descendants. Settlers migrating from New England tipped the balance toward British ethnicity in the early 19th century.[176] Jobs on the turnpikes, canals, and railroads attracted floods of Irish immigrants in the early 19th century, especially in the 1840s during the Great Famine, solidifying the city's Irish base. Albany elected its first Irish Catholic mayor (Michael Nolan) two years before Boston did.[177] Polish and Italian immigrants began arriving in Albany in the wave of immigration in the latter part of the 19th century. Their numbers were smaller than in many other eastern cities mainly because most had found manufacturing jobs at General Electric in Schenectady.[178] The Jewish community had been established early, with Sephardic Jewish members as part of the Beverwijck community. Its population rose during the late 19th century, when many Ashkenazi Jews immigrated from eastern Europe.[178] In that period, there was also an influx of Chinese and east Asian immigrants, who settled in the downtown section of the city. Many of their descendants have since moved to suburban areas.[179] Immigration plummeted after the Immigration Act of 1924.[citation needed]

Albany was also a destination of internal migration, as many African Americans moved north in their Great Migration from the rural South before and after World War I to fill industrial positions and find new opportunities. In the early years, African-Americans lived together with Italians, Jews and other immigrants in the South End, where housing was older and less expensive.[180] The black community has grown as a proportion of the population since then; African-Americans made up three percent of the city's population in 1950, six percent in 1960, 12 percent in 1970, and 30 percent in 2010. The change in proportion is related mostly to middle-class white families moving to the suburbs and black families remaining within city limits during the same time period.[6][173]

Since 2007, the number of Burmese refugees to Albany has increased. The Burmese refugee community consists mostly of persons of Karen ethnicity. An estimated 5,000 Burmese refugees reside in Albany as of January 2015.[181][182]

Modern overview


With a 2013 Census-estimated population of 1.1 million,[183] the Capital District is the third-most populous metropolitan region in the state. As of April 1, 2020, Albany's population is 99,224.[184]

As of the 2010 census,[173] Albany's population density was 4,572.7 per square mile (1,779.2/km2). There were 46,362 housing units at an average density of 2,166.4 per square mile (842.9/km2); 5,205 of these units (11.2%) were vacant. The racial makeup of the city residents was 52.3% white; 27% black or African American; 0.06% Native American or Native Alaskan; 7.4% Asian; 0.1% Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander; .06% from other races; and 3.6% from two or more races. A total of 9.2% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.[q] Non-Hispanic Whites were 52.0% of the population in 2010,[109] compared to 87.0% in 1970.[185]

As of 2010, 20.0% of Albany's population was under the age of 18, 19.3% was aged 18 to 24, 29.2% was aged 25 to 44, 18.1% was aged 45 to 64, and 13.4% was aged 65 years or older. The median age was 31.4 years. For every 100 females, there were 90.6 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 86.5 males. Some 81.3% of the population had completed high school or earned an equivalency diploma.[173]

As of the 2000 census, the top five ancestry groups in the city were African American (27%), Irish (18.1%), Italian (12.4%), German (10.4%), and English (5.2%); (33.1%) of the population reported "other ancestries". Albany is home to a Triqui language-speaking community of Mexican-Americans.[186][187]

There were 40,709 households in Albany in 2000, out of which 22.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 25.3% were married couples living together, 16.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 54.8% were non-families. 41.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.11 and the average family size was 2.95.[173]

The median income for a household in the city in 2000 was $81,399, and the median income for a family was $84,480 (male, year-round worker) and $76,635 (female, year-round worker). The per capita income for the city was $62,270.[188][r] About 16.0% of families and 21.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 28.8% of those under age 18 and 12.5% of those age 65 or over.[173] The rate of reported violent crimes for 2008 (1,095 incidents per 100,000 residents) were more than double the rate for similarly sized US cities. Reported property crimes (4,669 incidents per 100,000 residents) were somewhat lower.[189][190]

Demographically speaking, the population of Albany and the Capital District mirrors the characteristics of the United States consumer population as a whole better than any other major municipality in the country. According to a 2004 study conducted by the Acxiom Corporation, Albany and its environs are the top-ranked standard test market for new business and retail products. Albany, Rochester, and Syracuse all scored within the top five.[191]

According to the 2020 American Community Survey, the Latino population was: 4.57% Puerto Rican, 1.45% Dominican, .84% Ecuadorian, .77% Mexican, .69% Salvadoran, .22% Cuban.[192]

Culture

Nightlife and entertainment

 
Price Chopper sponsors the annual Fourth of July fireworks show at the Empire State Plaza (2009 show pictured).[193]

Albany's geographic situation—roughly equidistant from New York City to the south and Montreal to the north — makes it a convenient stop for nationally touring artists and acts. The Palace Theatre and The Egg are mid-sized forums for music, theater, and spoken-word performances; the Capital Repertory Theatre is smaller.[194] The TU Center is the city's largest musical venue for nationally and internationally prominent bands. It also hosts trade shows, sporting events, and other large gatherings.[195] Some people praise the cultural contributions of Albany and the greater Capital District;[97] others suggest that the city has a "cultural identity crisis" due to its widespread geography, which requires a car to reach most of what the area has to offer, a necessity not seen in larger and more densely populated metropolitan areas such as New York and Boston.[196]

In recent years, the city's government has invested resources to cultivate venues and neighborhoods that attract after-hours business. Madison Avenue, Pearl Street, Delaware Avenue and Lark Street are the most active entertainment areas in the city. Many restaurants, clubs, and bars have opened since the mid-1990s, revitalizing areas that had once been abandoned and reclaiming old row houses, businesses, and a pump station.[194] Bars are concentrated in three areas: about two blocks on Park Street, downtown; along Lark Street, home to smaller bars, which fit the neighborhood's artistic and eclectic style; and Western and Madison Avenues, in midtown, centered on the College of Saint Rose and SUNY Albany's downtown campus and drawing younger people.[197] Much of the bar restaurant scene features classic Irish Pubs.[198]

Last call in Albany is 4:00 a.m. nightly. New York law sets that time as last call statewide; although counties may set an earlier time, municipalities may not. More than half of the state's counties have an earlier closing time; Albany County, like all counties in the Capital District, does not.[199]

Festivals

 
An artist paints tulips during the Tulip Fest at Washington Park.

Alive at 5 is a free, weekly concert series held downtown during the summer on Thursdays;[200] with 10 concerts in 2010, total attendance was roughly 100,000.[201] The Tulip Festival is set in Washington Park and celebrates the city's Dutch heritage, which began with Pinkster Festival, an African-Dutch Celebration.[202] This traditional Albany event marks the beginning of spring as thousands of tulips bloom in the park in early May;[203] attendance to the Tulip Festival in 2010 was approximately 80,000.[201] Another large festival in Albany is the Capital Pride Parade and Festival, a major gay pride event held each June, attended by an estimated 30,000 spectators annually from across Upstate New York.[204]

 
The Capital Gay Pride Parade and Festival is the largest celebration of LGBTQ culture in Upstate New York.

The Price Chopper Fabulous Fourth and Fireworks Festival at the Empire State Plaza celebrates Independence Day with musical performances and the region's largest fireworks display.[193] Freihofer's Run for Women is a 5-kilometer run through the city that draws more than 4,000 participants from across the country; it is an annual event that began in 1978.[205]The Albany Chefs' Food & Wine Festival: Wine & Dine for the Arts is an annual Festival that hosts more than 3500 people over 3 days. The Festival showcases more than 70 Regional Chefs & Restaurants, 250 Global Wines & Spirits, a NYS Craft Beer Pavilion, 4 competitions (The Signature Chef Invitational, Rising Star Chef, Barista Albany and Battle of the Bartenders) and one Grand Gala Reception, Dinner & Auction featuring 10 f Albany's Iconic Chefs. The Albany Chefs' Food & Wine Festival donates all net proceeds to deserving Albany Arts Organizations and is held the Thursday-Saturday preceding Martin Luther King Weekend. Smaller events include the African American Family Day Arts Festival each August at the Empire State Plaza;[193] the Latin Fest, held each August at the Corning Preserve;[206] the Albany Jazz Festival, an annual end-of-summer event held at the Corning Preserve;[207] and Lark Fest, a music and art festival held each fall.[208]

Museums and historic sites

 
Southwest corner of the Cultural Education Center on Empire State Plaza housing the State Museum, Library, and Archives.

Because of Albany's historical and political significance, the city has numerous museums, historical buildings, and historic districts. Albany is home to the New York State Museum, the New York State Library and the New York State Archives; all three facilities are in the Cultural Education Center at the south end of Empire State Plaza and are free to the public.[209] The USS Slater (DE-766), a decommissioned World War II destroyer escort that was restored in 1998, is a museum ship docked in the Hudson River at Quay Street. It is the only ship of its kind still afloat.[210] The Albany Heritage Area Visitors Center, at the corner of Clinton Avenue and Broadway at Quackenbush Square, hosts a museum, gift shop, and the Henry Hudson Planetarium.[211] In early 2012, the Irish American Heritage Museum opened in downtown Albany. The museum is home to exhibits highlighting the contributions of the Irish people in America.[212]

The Albany Institute of History and Art, on Washington Avenue near the Center Square Neighborhood and State Capitol, is "dedicated to collecting, preserving, interpreting and promoting interest in the history, art, culture of Albany and the Upper Hudson Valley region." The museum's most notable permanent exhibits include an extensive collection of paintings by the Hudson River School and an exhibit on Ancient Egypt featuring the institute's "Albany Mummies."

 
Ten Broeck Mansion is home to the Albany County Historical Association.[213]

Albany is home to 57 listings on the National Register of Historic Places[214] (NRHP) and five National Historic Landmarks.[215] The Ten Broeck Mansion, a 1797 Federal-style mansion (later renovated in the Greek-Revival style) built for Abraham Ten Broeck (mayor of Albany 1779–1783 and 1796–1798)[216] is a historic house museum and the headquarters of the Albany County Historical Association;[213] it was added to the NRHP in 1971.[217] Later known as "Arbor Hill", it gave the current neighborhood its name.[218]

Literature and film

Albany has been the subject, inspiration, or location for many written and cinematic works. Many non-fiction works have been written on the city. One of the city's more notable claims to fame is Ironweed (1983), the 1984 Pulitzer Prize-winning book by Albany native William Kennedy. Ironweed was the third in a series of books by Kennedy known as the "Albany Cycle".[219][220] The elusive author Trevanian also grew up in Albany and wrote The Crazyladies of Pearl Street (2005), about a North Albany neighborhood along Pearl Street. The book is considered a semi-autobiographical memoir.[221]

In 1987, the film version of Ironweed premiered at the Palace Theatre.[222] The movie starred Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep, each of whom were nominated for Academy Awards for their performances;[223] much of the filming was done on location in Albany.[222] Most recently the downtown area was the site of filming for the action-thriller Salt, starring Angelina Jolie,[224] and the action-comedy The Other Guys, starring Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg.[225]

Authors Herman Melville and Henry James lived with their families in Albany when young, before their careers. James identified his character Isabel Archer, the heroine of his novel The Portrait of a Lady, as being from Albany.[226] Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (adapted for the Broadway hit Wicked), grew up in North Albany[227] and graduated from SUNY Albany.[228]

Education

 
Albany High School is the central high school of the City School District of Albany.[229]

The City School District of Albany (CSDA) operates the city's public school system, which consists of 17 schools and learning centers;[229] in addition, there are 7 charter schools,[230] including Green Tech Charter High School,[231] and Albany Leadership High School.[232] [s] In the 2015–2016 school year, over 9,000 students were enrolled in the public school system.[229] The district had an average class size of 18,[236] an 81-percent graduation rate,[t] and a 5-percent dropout rate.[237] The district's 2010–11 budget is $202.8 million.[238] Although considered by the state to be one of the lowest-achieving high schools in New York, Albany High was listed as the nation's 976th best high school in a 2010 Newsweek/Washington Post report.[239] Albany also has a number of private schools, including the coed Bishop Maginn High School and Albany Free School; the all-boys Albany Academy;[u] and the all-girls Academy of the Holy Names and Albany Academy for Girls.[241]

 
State Quad is one of the four iconic dormitory towers at SUNY Albany's Uptown Campus.[242]

Albany has a prominent history in higher education and was ranked third in a Forbes survey called "The Best Places with the Best Education" in 2005;[243] it ranked top on Forbes' "IQ Campuses" list as part of its 150 Cheap Places to Live series in 2006.[244] The Albany Medical College (private), today part of Albany Medical Center, was founded in 1838. Albany Law School (private) is the oldest law school in New York and the fourth-oldest in the country; it was opened in 1851. President William McKinley was an alumnus. The Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences (private) is the second-oldest pharmacy school in New York and the fifteenth-oldest in the United States.

The New York State Normal School, one of the oldest teachers colleges in the United States, opened in 1844; it was later known as the State Teachers College. It eventually evolved into the University at Albany, also known as SUNY Albany (public), which inherited the Normal School's original downtown campus on Western Avenue. The center of the campus moved to its current Uptown Campus in the west end of the city in 1970. SUNY Albany is a unit of the State University of New York and one of only four university centers in the system.[242] Other colleges and universities in Albany include Empire State College, The College of Saint Rose, Excelsior College, Maria College, Mildred Elley, and Sage College of Albany. Nearby Hudson Valley Community College (HVCC) fills the community college niche in the Albany-Troy area.[245] The effect of the campuses on the city's population is substantial: Combining the student bodies of all the aforementioned campuses (except HVCC) results in 63,149 students, or almost 70 percent of the 2008 estimate of Albany's permanent population.[246]

Economy

Albany's economy, along with that of the Capital District in general, is heavily dependent on government, health care, education, and more recently, technology. Because of these typically steady economic bases, the local economy has been relatively immune to national economic recessions in the past.[248] More than 25 percent of the city's population works in government-related positions.[249] Albany's estimated daytime population is more than 162,000. Companies based in Albany include Trans World Entertainment, AMRI Global and Clough Harbour. Albany has the fourth highest amount of lawyers in its employment pool (7.5 lawyers per 1,000 jobs) compared to the rest of the nation, behind Washington, D.C., Trenton, New Jersey, and New York City, respectively.[250]

Tech Valley

Since the 2000s, the economy of Albany and the surrounding Capital District has been redirected toward a high technology focus. Tech Valley is a marketing name for the eastern part of New York State, encompassing Albany, the Capital District, and the Hudson Valley.[251] Originated in 1998 to promote the greater Albany area as a high-tech competitor to regions such as Silicon Valley and Boston, it has since grown to represent the counties in the Capital District and extending to 19 counties from IBM's Westchester County plants in the south to the Canada–US border in the north. The area's high technology ecosystem is supported by technologically focused academic institutions including Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the State University of New York Polytechnic Institute.[252] Tech Valley encompasses 19 counties straddling both sides of the Adirondack Northway and the New York Thruway,[251] and with heavy state taxpayer subsidy, has experienced significant growth in the computer hardware side of the high-technology industry,[248] with great strides in the nanotechnology sector, digital electronics design, and water- and electricity-dependent integrated microchip circuit manufacturing.[253]

Government

 
Albany City Hall, an 1883 Richardsonian Romanesque structure, is the seat of Albany's government.

Albany has a Strong mayor-council form of government, which functions under the Dongan Charter, which was granted by colonial governor Thomas Dongan in 1686 when Albany was incorporated as a city. A revised charter was adopted by referendum in 1998, but was legally reckoned as an amendment to the Dongan Charter. This gives Albany the distinction of having the oldest active city charter in the United States and "arguably the longest-running instrument of municipal government in the Western Hemisphere."[8][254] The mayor, who is elected every four years, heads the executive branch of city government.[255] The current mayor, Kathy Sheehan, was first elected in 2013. She replaced former mayor Gerald Jennings who was mayor for 20 years from 1994 to 2013.[256] The Common Council represents the legislative branch of city government and is made up of fifteen council members (each elected from one ward) and an at-large Common Council President.[254] The current president is Corey Ellis;[257] he began his term in January 2018.[258]

While Albany has its own city government, it has also been the seat of Albany County since the county's formation in 1683 and the capital of New York since 1797. As such, the city is home to all branches of the county and state governments, as well as its own. Albany City Hall sits on Eagle Street, opposite the State Capitol,[259] and the Albany County Office Building is on State Street.[260] The state government has offices scattered throughout the city.

Albany is in the 20th Congressional district, represented by Paul Tonko (D) in the United States House of Representatives. The city is represented by Chuck Schumer (D)[261] and Kirsten Gillibrand (D)[262] in the United States Senate. On the state level, the city is in the 44th district in the New York Senate, represented by Neil Breslin (D). In the New York Assembly, western Albany is in the 109th district, represented by Patricia Fahy (D) while downtown and eastern Albany are in the 108th district, represented by John T. McDonald III (D). As the seat of Albany County, the city is the location of the county's courts including Family Court, County Court, Surrogate Court, Supreme Court, and New York Court of Appeals.[263] Albany is the site of a federal courthouse that houses the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York.[264]

Politics

Albany's politics have been dominated by the Democratic Party since the 1920s; Daniel (Uncle Dan) O'Connell established a political machine in the city with the election of William Stormont Hackett as mayor in 1922.[265] Prior to that, William Barnes Jr. had set up a Republican machine in the 1890s. Barnes' success is attributed to the fact that he owned two newspapers in Albany and that he was the grandson of Thurlow Weed, the influential newspaper publisher and political boss.[266] O'Connell's organization overcame Barnes' in 1922 and survived well into the 1980s (even after his death), as the machine put forth candidates for whom the electorate dutifully voted. In many instances, votes were outright bought;[267] it was not uncommon for the machine to "buy poor folks' loyalty and trust with a fiver".[268]

Gerald Jennings' upset in the 1993 Democratic mayoral primary over Harold Joyce, who had the Democratic Party's formal endorsement and had only recently been its county chairman, is often cited as the end of the O'Connell era in Albany.[269] In the early 21st century, Albany continued to be dominated by the Democratic Party. Democratic Party enrollment in the city was 38,862 in 2009, while Republican enrollment was 3,487.[270] As of 2022, every elected city position had been held by a Democrat since 1931.[271]

In November 2013, Kathy Sheehan became the first woman to be elected Mayor of Albany.[272]

Religious life

 
The First Church in Albany (Reformed) is the oldest congregation in Upstate New York.[273]

Like most cities of comparable age and size, Albany has well-established Orthodox Christian, Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish communities. Albany is home to the oldest Christian congregation in Upstate New York and the Mother Churches of two Christian dioceses. As of June 2010, eight churches or religious buildings in the city were listed on the National Register of Historic Places,[214] one of which—St. Peter's Episcopal Church on State Street—is a National Historic Landmark.[215] Established in 1642,[274] the congregation of the First Church in Albany (Reformed), also known as the North Dutch Church (lon North Pearl Street), is the second-oldest Reformed Church in America.[273] The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (Eagle Street and Madison Avenue, built 1852) is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, led by Bishop Edward Scharfenberger,[275][276] and the Cathedral of All Saints (South Swan Street and Elk Street, built 1888) is the cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of Albany.[277][278] As of 2010, the city was home to eleven Catholic churches[279] and six Episcopal churches.[280] Despite its history of Christendom, the Albany metropolitan area was found to be among the most post-Christian cities in the United States in a 2019 study by the Barna Group.[281][282][283]

A significant Jewish presence has existed in Albany as early as 1658.[284] As of 2010, Albany is home to two Conservative synagogues, a Chabad-Lubavitch synagogue, an Orthodox synagogue, and two Reform synagogues.[285] Albany is also home to one of the few Karaite synagogues outside Israel.[286][verification needed] As of 2008, the total membership in Albany's synagogues was estimated at 12,000-13,000, with half the members residing outside the city.[284] Since the early 2000s, there has been an increase in Orthodox Jews moving to Albany from the New York Metro area, largely due to cheaper housing prices and closer walking proximity to synagogues.[287]

There is a sizable Islamic community in Albany and its surrounding suburbs with at least four major mosques in the region. While there has been a relatively small presence of Muslims for several decades, the population has significantly increased since around 2010 with the arrival of hundreds of refugees from countries such as Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.

Exact numbers on religious denominations in Albany are not readily available. Demographic statistics in the United States depend heavily on the United States Census Bureau, which cannot ask about religious affiliation as part of its decennial census.[288] It does compile some national and statewide religious statistics,[289] but these are not representative of a city the size of Albany. One report from 2000 offers religious affiliations for Albany County. According to the data, 59.2% of Albany County residents identified as Christian: 47% are Roman Catholic, 8.4% are mainline Protestants, 2.7% are Evangelical Protestants, and 1.1% are Eastern or Oriental Orthodox Christians. Residents who practice Judaism make up 4.2% of the population and Muslims represent 0.2%.[290]

Media

 
WTEN (headquarters pictured), WXXA, and Spectrum News broadcast from within city limits.

The Times Union is Albany's primary daily newspaper and the only one based close to the city; its headquarters moved from within city limits to suburban Colonie in the 1960s after a dispute with Mayor Corning over land needed for expansion.[291] Its circulation totals about 73,000 on weekdays and 143,000 on Sundays.[292] Serving Albany to a lesser degree are The Daily Gazette, based in Schenectady,[293] and The Record, of Troy.[294] Metroland is the alternative newsweekly in the area, publishing each Thursday,[295] while The Business Review is a business weekly published each Friday.[296] The Legislative Gazette, another weekly newspaper, focuses exclusively on issues related to the Legislature and the state government.[297]

As of 2010, the Albany-Schenectady-Troy media market is the 63rd-largest in the country in terms of radio[298] and the 57th-largest in terms of television audiences.[299] It is a broadcast market with historical significance. The pioneering influence of General Electric in Schenectady directly contributed to the area emerging as the birthplace of station-based television with WRGB; the station was also the first affiliate of NBC.[300] In 1947, the region was home to the first independently owned and operated commercial FM radio station in the United States: W47A.[300] WGY was the second commercial radio station in New York and the twelfth in the nation.[300] The Capital District is home to ABC affiliate WTEN 10,[301] CBS affiliate WRGB 6 (also operating CW affiliate WCWN 45),[302] Fox affiliate WXXA 23,[303] NBC affiliate WNYT 13 (also operating MyNetworkTV affiliate WNYA 51),[304] and PBS member station WMHT 17. Charter Communications hosts Spectrum News Capital Region, the area's only local 24-hour news channel.[305] The area has numerous radio stations.

Transportation

Highways

The Northway (Interstate 87 north of the New York State Thruway) connects Albany by car to Canada at Champlain; Autoroute 15 continues into Quebec, linking Albany to Montreal. Interstate 90 connects Albany to both Buffalo and Boston, via the New York State Thruway and the Massachusetts Turnpike respectively, both of which use I-90 (the NYS Thruway partially, the Massachusetts Turnpike fully). South of Albany, I-87 becomes part of the Thruway and ends at Interstate 278 in the Bronx. Albany is at the crossroad of I-87 and I-90, creating a junction between Buffalo, Boston, Montreal, and New York. Interstate 787 links Albany to Watervliet, Colonie, and Menands. By way of Route 7, I-787 connects to the Northway.[306][better source needed]

Trains

Since the closure of Union Station on Broadway, area passenger-rail service is provided by Amtrak at the Albany-Rensselaer station across the river in Rensselaer. In 2009, the station saw more than 720,000 passengers, making it Amtrak's second-busiest in New York, behind Manhattan's Penn Station.[307] Amtrak provides service south to New York City; north to Montreal, and Rutland (Vermont); west to Niagara Falls, Toronto and Chicago; and east to Boston.

Airport

Albany's major airport is Albany International Airport in Colonie. Major airline service to Albany includes service by: American Airlines, Cape Air, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, JetBlue Airlines, and United Airlines; Million Air is the local fixed-base operator.[308] In 2010, Albany had the highest average airfare in New York, though the per-mile cost on its busiest routes was second-lowest in the state.[309]

Bus

The Capital District Transportation Authority (CDTA) provides bus service throughout Albany and the surrounding area, including Schenectady, Troy, and Saratoga Springs.[310] The city was once served by an urban streetcar service maintained by the United Traction Company. As in many American cities, after the advent of the automobile, light rail services declined in Albany and were replaced by bus and taxi services.[311] Greyhound Lines,[312] Trailways,[313] Peter Pan,[314] Short Line, Vermont Translines, and Yankee Trails[315] buses all serve a downtown terminal. Brown Coach provides commuter service.[316] Low-cost curbside bus service from the SUNY Albany campus and the Rensselaer station is also provided by Megabus, with direct service to New York City.

Boat

 
The Port of Albany-Rensselaer adds $428 million to the Capital District's $70.1 billion gross product.[317]

Albany, long an important Hudson River port, today serves domestic and international ships and barges through the Port of Albany-Rensselaer, on both sides of the river. The port has the largest mobile harbor crane in the state of New York.[318] The New York State Barge Canal, the ultimate successor of the Erie Canal, is in use today, largely by tourist and private boats.[319]

Sports

 
Siena guard Ronald Moore dribbles toward the basket in a game against Loyola in January 2010.[320][321]

Albany has no major league professional sports teams, and minor league teams typically have low support.[322]

The Albany Devils were a minor league ice hockey team that moved to the city for the 2010–11 season. They played in the American Hockey League and were affiliated with the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League.[323][324] The Devils replaced the Albany River Rats, who played in the Capital Region from 1990 to 2010, when they relocated to Charlotte, North Carolina. The Albany Devils moved to Binghamton, New York in 2017.[325]

The Times Union Center has previously hosted arena football teams including the Albany Firebirds in the Arena Football League (AFL) from 1990 to 2000 and then a team originally known as the Albany Conquest and later the Firebirds in the af2, the AFL's developmental league, from 2002 to 2009. The Albany Empire played in the AFL from 2018 through the 2019 season when the league folded. A new Albany Empire was relaunched in the National Arena League for the 2021 season.[326]

The Tri-City ValleyCats short season minor league baseball team have played at the Joseph L. Bruno Stadium on the Hudson Valley Community College campus in North Greenbush since 2002. Prior to the ValleyCats' arrival, the Albany-Colonie Diamond Dogs (1995–2002) played at Heritage Park in Colonie; due to financial pressures, and facing impending competition from the ValleyCats, the franchise folded in 2002.[327]

The Albany Legends (International Basketball League), played in the Washington Avenue Armory from 2010 to 2014 before moving to Schenectady.[328] The Albany Patroons have played at the Armory on and off since 1982 and currently play in The Basketball League.[329]

With the large number of local colleges and universities around Albany, college sports are popular. The University at Albany's Great Danes play at the Division I level in all sports. The football team is a member of the Colonial Athletic Association while all other sports teams play as members of the America East Conference.[330] In 2006, UAlbany became the first SUNY-affiliated school to send a team to the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.[331] The Siena Saints saw a rise in popularity after their men's basketball team made it to the NCAA Tournament in 2008, 2009, and 2010.[332] All 18 Saints teams are Division I and play in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference.[333] Although Siena's campus is in nearby Colonie, the men's basketball team plays at the Times Union Center.[320]

UAlbany hosted the New York Giants training camp from 1996 to 2012.[334][335]

On February 23, 2021, it was announced that the National Lacrosse League (NLL) would return to the city with the relocation of the New England Black Wolves.[336] The team was named the Albany FireWolves on April 15, 2021.[337] This is the second NLL team to be based in the area; the first, the Albany Attack, played in the city from 2000 to 2003.[338]

Sister cities

The city of Nijmegen, Netherlands connected with Albany following World War II. With the help of the Catholic university in Albany, the Catholic University of Nijmegen (Radboud University Nijmegen) rebuilt its partly destroyed library, with over 50,000 books being donated to the Dutch university. To show its gratitude for post-war assistance, the city sent Albany 50,000 tulip bulbs in 1948; this act led to the establishment of the annual Tulip Festival.[97] Most of the other connections were made in the 1980s during Mayor Whalen's term in office as part of his cultural expansion program.[97]

Albany's sister cities are:[339]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ For the area code.
  2. ^ MSN Encarta states that this nickname "resulted from the meeting here in 1754 of the Albany Congress, which adopted Benjamin Franklin's Plan of Union, the first formal proposal to unite the colonies.[1]
  3. ^ In this instance, assiduity, "the quality of acting with constant and careful attention."[2]
  4. ^ On Birch Hill Road near Loudonville Reservoir.
  5. ^ Mean water elevation, varies with the tide.[5]
  6. ^ This name would later be adopted by the city of Schenectady, to the west.[14]
  7. ^ The Dongan Charter incorporated Albany three months after New York City's charter was ratified. However, the latter forfeited its charter during Leisler's Rebellion, making Albany's the oldest effective charter in the country.[25][26]
  8. ^ James Stuart (1633–1701), brother and successor of Charles II, was both the Duke of York and Duke of Albany before being crowned king in 1685. His title of Duke of York is the source of the name of the province of New York.[27]
  9. ^ The Plan of Union's original intention was to unite the colonies in defense against aggressions of the French to the north; it was not an attempt to become independent from the auspices of the British crown.[38]
  10. ^ A rough grid pattern was established in 1764, aligning the streets with Clinton Avenue, which marked the northern border of Albany at the time. Patroon of the Manor of Rensselaerswyck Stephen Van Rensselaer II followed the same directional system north of Clinton Avenue on his lands; however, the two systems were not related otherwise, which is why cross streets north and south of Clinton Avenue do not align. The stockade surrounding the city was taken down shortly before the Revolutionary War, allowing for expansion. De Witt, city surveyor at the time, continued the grid pattern to the west and renamed on his 1794 map any streets that had honored British Royalty. Hawk Street is the only road that retained its original name; the rest were renamed after birds and mammals.[46][47]
  11. ^ "The Colonie" made up the current area of Arbor Hill and was the more urban part of the Manor of Rensselaerswyck, which surrounded Albany.[52] It is the source of the name of the current town and village of Colonie.[53]
  12. ^ Grondahl summarizes it as, "This hard-line position of isolationism on the part of the machine was a curse economically – but a strange blessing unintentionally in architectural terms. While downtown went to seed and plans for large-scale construction and improvements came to a virtual standstill in Albany without federal money, pockets of the city's historic housing stock escaped the wrecking ball."[87]
  13. ^ The Empire State Plaza was originally known as the South Mall; the South Mall Arterial is the only remnant of that naming scheme.
  14. ^ Mean monthly maxima and minima (i.e. the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  15. ^ Official records for Albany kept January 1874 to May 1938 at downtown and at Albany Int'l since June 1938. For more information, see Threadex
  16. ^ In 2009, Bank of America (which now owns FleetBank, the bank that eventually bought Norstar) consolidated its operations in an office building on State Street, leaving the former train station vacant.[163] Mayor Corning made great efforts to save the building, which had been owned by his great-grandfather's railroad a hundred years before. He was able to do it when governor Rockefeller brought state money in to purchase the building.[92]
  17. ^ The percentages listed here were calculated using the raw population data given by the Census Bureau divided by the total population, rounded to the nearest hundredth. Note that these percentages were calculated using the total population value of 97,856 as the divisor, not the 94,233 people claiming one race.[173]
  18. ^ These values were given in 1999 dollars; here they have been adjusted for inflation.[173]
  19. ^ Albany was once home to 12 charter schools[233] until the closing of New Covenant Charter School in 2010.[234] It was announced in July 2010 that the Harriet Gibbons High School, an alternative high school for at-risk ninth graders, would close after a negative report from the State Department of Education demanded the elimination of ineffective programs.[235]
  20. ^ The Accountability and Overview Report[236] puts the class of 2009 at 513 students and the Comprehensive Information Report[237] states that 416 of them graduated.
  21. ^ Christian Brothers Academy was located in various Albany locations throughout the 19th century and then moved to the University Heights neighborhood in 1937. The school moved out of the city to Colonie in 1998 and has remained there since.[240]

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albany, york, albany, ɔː, listen, bən, capital, state, york, also, seat, largest, city, albany, county, albany, west, bank, hudson, river, about, miles, south, confluence, with, mohawk, river, about, miles, north, york, city, albanystate, capitalcity, albanycl. Albany ˈ ɔː l b en i listen AWL ben ee is the capital of the U S state of New York also the seat and largest city of Albany County Albany is on the west bank of the Hudson River about 10 miles 16 km south of its confluence with the Mohawk River and about 135 miles 220 km north of New York City AlbanyState capitalCity of AlbanyClockwise from top Downtown from Rensselaer middle class housing in the Helderberg neighborhood Palace Theatre Empire State Plaza from the Cultural Education Center North Pearl Street at Columbia Street and the State Quad at SUNY AlbanyFlagSealEtymology Named for the Scottish Duke of Albany whose title comes from the Gaelic name for Scotland AlbaNicknames SmallbanyThe 518 a Cradle of the Union b Cap CityMotto Assiduity c Boundaries of and major thoroughfares through AlbanyLocation in Albany County and the state of New YorkAlbanyLocation within New York state Show map of New YorkAlbanyLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesAlbanyLocation within North AmericaShow map of North AmericaCoordinates 42 39 09 N 073 45 26 W 42 65250 N 73 75722 W 42 65250 73 75722 Coordinates 42 39 09 N 073 45 26 W 42 65250 N 73 75722 W 42 65250 73 75722CountryUnited StatesStateNew YorkRegionCapital DistrictCountyAlbanySettled1614 409 years ago 1614 Incorporated1686 337 years ago 1686 Government TypeStrong mayor council MayorKathy Sheehan D Area 3 State capital21 94 sq mi 56 81 km2 Land21 40 sq mi 55 44 km2 Water0 53 sq mi 1 38 km2 Metro2 811 6 sq mi 7 282 km2 Elevation 4 141 ft 43 m Highest elevation Loudonville d 378 ft 115 m Lowest elevation Hudson River e 2 ft 0 6 m Population 2020 State capital99 224 Density4 635 77 sq mi 1 789 90 km2 Urban593 142 US 73rd Urban density2 186 3 sq mi 844 1 km2 Metro1 170 483 US 63rd Metro density416 3 sq mi 160 7 km2 DemonymAlbanian 6 Time zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP Codes12201 12212 12214 12220 12222 12232Area codes518 838Geocode977310 978659ISO 3166 code36 01000FIPS code36 01000GNIS feature ID978659Websitealbanyny govThe city is known for its architecture commerce culture institutions of higher education and rich history It is the economic and cultural core of the Capital District of the State of New York which comprises the Albany Schenectady Troy Metropolitan Statistical Area including the nearby cities and suburbs of Troy Schenectady and Saratoga Springs With an estimated population of 1 1 million in 2013 the Capital District is the third most populous metropolitan region in the state As of 2020 Albany s population was 99 224 The Hudson River area was originally inhabited by Algonquian speaking Mohican Mahican who called it Pempotowwuthut Muhhcanneuw 7 The area was settled by Dutch colonists who in 1614 built Fort Nassau for fur trading and in 1624 built Fort Orange In 1664 the English took over the Dutch settlements renaming the city Albany in honor of the Duke of Albany the future James II The city was officially chartered in 1686 under English rule It became the capital of New York in 1797 after the formation of the United States Albany is one of the oldest surviving settlements of the original British thirteen colonies no other city in the United States has been continuously chartered as long 8 In the late 18th century and throughout most of the 19th Albany was a center of trade and transportation The city lies toward the north end of the navigable Hudson River It was the original eastern terminus of the Erie Canal connecting to the Great Lakes and was home to some of the earliest railroads in the world In the 1920s a powerful political machine controlled by the Democratic Party arose in Albany In the latter part of the 20th century Albany s population shrank because of urban sprawl and suburbanization In the 1990s the New York State Legislature approved for the city a US 234 million building and renovation plan which spurred redevelopment downtown 9 In the early 21st century Albany s high technology industry grew with great strides in nanotechnology 10 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Mohican Mohawk and Dutch before 1660 1 2 British Occupation to 1800 1 3 1800 to 1942 1 4 1942 to present day 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Crime 4 Cityscape 4 1 Neighborhoods 4 2 Parks and recreation 4 3 Architecture 5 Demographics 5 1 City of immigrants 5 2 Modern overview 6 Culture 6 1 Nightlife and entertainment 6 2 Festivals 6 3 Museums and historic sites 6 4 Literature and film 7 Education 8 Economy 8 1 Tech Valley 9 Government 9 1 Politics 10 Religious life 11 Media 12 Transportation 12 1 Highways 12 2 Trains 12 3 Airport 12 4 Bus 12 5 Boat 13 Sports 14 Sister cities 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 Bibliography 19 Further reading 20 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Albany New YorkHistorical Affiliations Dutch Republic 1614 1664 British Empire 1664 1776 United States 1776 present Mohican Mohawk and Dutch before 1660 Edit North Pearl Street from Maiden Lane North by James Eights circa 1805 The Hudson River area was originally inhabited by Algonquian speaking Mohican Mahican who called it Pempotowwuthut Muhhcanneuw meaning the fireplace of the Mohican nation 12 Based to the west along the Mohawk River the Iroquoian speaking Mohawk called it Sche negh ta da through the pine woods referring to the path they took there 13 f The Mohawk were one of the Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy or Haudenosaunee According to Hendrick Aupaumut the Mohicans came to the area from the north and the west They settled along the Mahicannituck which is now called the Hudson River and called themselves the Muh he con neok the People of the Waters That Are Never Still This name evolved to Mohicans 15 The Mohawks were based in the Mohawk valley and noted for their fur trading and their access to trade between the Iroquois and other nations 16 The Mohawk became strong trading partners with the Dutch and English It is likely that the Albany area was visited by European fur traders perhaps as early as 1540 but the extent and duration of those visits are unclear 17 Permanent European claims began when Englishman Henry Hudson exploring for the Dutch East India Company on the Half Moon Dutch Halve Maen reached the area in 1609 claiming it for the United Netherlands 18 In 1614 Hendrick Christiaensen built Fort Nassau a fur trading post and the first documented European structure in present day Albany Commencement of the fur trade provoked hostility from the French colony in Canada and among the natives all of whom vied to control the trade In 1618 a flood ruined the fort on Castle Island but it was rebuilt in 1624 as Fort Orange 19 Both forts were named in honor of the leading family of the Dutch Revolt members of the House of Orange Nassau 20 Fort Orange and the surrounding area were incorporated as the village of Beverwijck English Beaverwick or Beaver District in 1652 21 22 and the city of Albany in 1686 In these early decades of trade the Dutch Mohican and Mohawk developed relations that reflected differences among their three cultures 23 British Occupation to 1800 Edit Albany is one of the oldest surviving European settlements from the original thirteen colonies 24 and the longest continuously chartered city in the United States g When New Netherland was captured by the English in 1664 the name was changed from Beverwijck to Albany in honor of the Duke of Albany later James II 27 h Duke of Albany was a Scottish title given since 1398 generally to a younger son of the King of Scots 28 The name is ultimately derived from Alba the Gaelic name for Scotland 29 The Dutch briefly regained Albany in August 1673 and renamed the city Willemstadt the English took permanent possession with the Treaty of Westminster 1674 30 On November 1 1683 the Province of New York was split into counties with Albany County being the largest At that time the county included all of present New York State north of Dutchess and Ulster Counties in addition to present day Bennington County Vermont theoretically stretching west to the Pacific Ocean 31 32 Albany became the county seat 33 Albany was formally chartered as a municipality by provincial Governor Thomas Dongan on July 22 1686 The Dongan Charter was virtually identical in content to the charter awarded to the city of New York three months earlier 34 Dongan created Albany as a strip of land 1 mile 1 6 km wide and 16 miles 26 km long 35 Over the years Albany would lose much of the land to the west and annex land to the north and south At this point Albany had a population of about 500 people 36 In 1754 representatives of seven British North American colonies met in the Stadt Huys Albany s city hall for the Albany Congress Benjamin Franklin of Pennsylvania presented the Albany Plan of Union there which was the first formal proposal to unite the colonies 37 Although it was never adopted by Parliament it was an important precursor to the United States Constitution 38 i The same year the French and Indian War the fourth in a series of wars dating back to 1689 began It ended in 1763 with French defeat resolving a situation that had been a constant threat to Albany and held back its growth 39 In 1775 with the colonies in the midst of the Revolutionary War the Stadt Huys became home to the Albany Committee of Correspondence the political arm of the local revolutionary movement which took over operation of Albany s government and eventually expanded its power to control all of Albany County Tories and prisoners of war were often jailed in the Stadt Huys alongside common criminals 40 In 1776 Albany native Philip Livingston signed the Declaration of Independence at Independence Hall in Philadelphia 41 During and after the Revolutionary War Albany County saw a great increase in real estate transactions After Horatio Gates defeated John Burgoyne at Saratoga in 1777 the upper Hudson Valley was generally at peace as the war raged on elsewhere Prosperity was soon seen all over Upstate New York Migrants from Vermont and Connecticut began flowing in noting the advantages of living on the Hudson and trading at Albany while being only a few days sail from New York City 42 Albany reported a population of 3 498 in the first national census in 1790 an increase of almost 700 since its chartering 36 On November 17 1793 a large fire broke out destroying 26 homes on Broadway Maiden Lane James Street and State Street The fire originated at a stable belonging to Leonard Gansevoort and was suspected to be arson set by enslaved people Three were arrested and charged with arson Pompey a man enslaved by Matthew Visscher Dinah a 14 year old girl enslaved by Volkert P Douw and Bet a 12 year old girl enslaved by Philip S Van Rensselaer On January 6 1794 the three were tried and sentenced to death For reasons unknown Governor George Clinton issued a temporary stay of execution but Dinah and Bet were executed by hanging on March 14 and Pompey on April 11 1794 43 In 1797 the state capital of New York was moved permanently to Albany From statehood to this date the Legislature had frequently moved the state capital between Albany Kingston Hurley Poughkeepsie and the city of New York 44 failed verification Albany is the tenth oldest state capital in the United States but is the second oldest city that is a state capital after Santa Fe New Mexico 45 1800 to 1942 Edit This 1895 map of Albany shows the gridded block system as it expanded around the former turnpikes Albany has been a center of transportation for much of its history In the late 18th and early 19th centuries Albany saw development of the turnpike and by 1815 Albany was the turnpike center of the state Simeon De Witt developed a grid block system in 1794 and renamed streets that had honored British royalty using names of birds and mammals instead j This grid was intersected by the major arterials coming out of Albany which cut through the city at unexpected angles 48 49 The construction of the turnpike across the state in conjunction with canal and railroad systems made Albany the hub of transportation for pioneers going to Buffalo and the Michigan Territory in the early and mid 19th century citation needed The steamer Albany departs for New York City at the height of steam travel in 1884 more than 1 5 million passengers took the trip 50 In 1807 Robert Fulton initiated a steamboat line from New York to Albany the first successful enterprise of its kind anywhere in the world 50 By 1810 with 10 763 people Albany was the tenth largest urban place in the nation 51 The town and village north of Albany known as the Colonie k was annexed in 1815 52 In 1825 the Erie Canal was completed forming a continuous water route from the Great Lakes to New York City Unlike the current Barge Canal which ends at nearby Waterford the original Erie Canal ended at Albany Lock 1 was north of Colonie Street 54 The Canal emptied into a 32 acre 13 ha man made lagoon called the Albany Basin which was Albany s main port from 1825 until the Port of Albany Rensselaer opened in 1932 55 56 In 1829 while working as a professor at the Albany Academy Joseph Henry widely regarded as the foremost American scientist of the 19th century 57 built the first electric motor Three years later he discovered electromagnetic self induction the SI unit for which is now the henry He went on to be the first Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 58 In the 1830 and 1840 censuses Albany was ranked as the ninth largest urban place in the nation 59 60 it dropped back to tenth in 1850 61 This was the last time the city was one of the top ten largest urban places in the nation 62 Albany also has significant history with rail transport 63 as the location of two major regional railroad headquarters The Delaware and Hudson Railway was headquartered in Albany at what is now the SUNY System Administration Building 64 In 1853 Erastus Corning a noted industrialist and Albany s mayor from 1834 to 1837 consolidated ten railroads stretching from Albany to Buffalo into the New York Central Railroad NYCRR headquartered in Albany until Cornelius Vanderbilt moved it to New York City in 1867 65 66 One of the ten companies that formed the NYCRR was the Mohawk and Hudson Railroad which was the first railroad in the state and the first successful steam railroad running regularly scheduled service in the country 67 68 The Albany Lumber District was home to the largest lumber market in the nation in 1865 69 While the key to Albany s economic prosperity in the 19th century was transportation industry and business also played a role Largely thanks to the city s Dutch and German roots beer was one of its biggest commodities Beverwyck Brewery originally known as Quinn and Nolan Nolan being mayor of Albany 1878 1883 70 was the last remaining brewer from that time when it closed in 1972 The city s location at the east end of the Erie Canal gave it unparalleled access to both raw products and a captive customer base in the west 71 Albany was known for its publishing houses and to some extent still is Albany was second only to Boston in the number of books produced for most of the 19th century 72 Iron foundries in both the north and south ends of the city attracted thousands of immigrants to the city for industrial jobs To this day one can see many intricate wrought iron details that were constructed in those years on what are now historic buildings The iron industry waned by the 1890s due to increased costs associated with a newly unionized workforce and the opening of mines in the Mesabi Range in Minnesota 73 Broadway in Albany during the funeral ceremonies for Abraham Lincoln 1865 Albany s other major exports during the 18th and 19th centuries were furs wheat meat and lumber 74 By 1865 there were almost 4 000 saw mills in the Albany area 74 and the Albany Lumber District was the largest lumber market in the nation 69 The city was also home to a number of banks The Bank of Albany 1792 1861 was the second chartered bank in New York 75 The city was the original home of the Albank founded in 1820 as the Albany Savings Bank 76 KeyBank founded in 1825 as the Commercial Bank of Albany 77 and Norstar Bank founded as the State Bank of Albany in 1803 78 American Express was founded in Albany in 1850 as an express mail business 79 In 1871 the northwestern portion of Albany west from Magazine Street was annexed to the neighboring town of Guilderland 80 after the town of Watervliet refused annexation of the territory 81 82 In return for this loss portions of Bethlehem and Watervliet were added to Albany Part of the land annexed to Guilderland was ceded back to Albany in 1910 setting up the current western border 52 The train carrying the body of slain President Abraham Lincoln came through Albany on the way to Illinois and some claim the ghostly image of that train remains 83 Albany opened one of the first commercial airports in the world and the first municipal airport in the United States in 1908 Originally on a polo field on Loudon Road it moved to Westerlo Island in 1909 and remained there until 1928 The Albany Municipal Airport jointly owned by the city and county was moved to its current location in Colonie in 1928 By 1916 Albany s northern and southern borders reached their modern courses 52 Westerlo Island to the south became the second to last annexation which occurred in 1926 84 1942 to present day Edit The Albany Institute of History amp Art Erastus Corning 2nd arguably Albany s most notable mayor and great grandson of the former mayor of the same name was elected in 1941 85 Although he was one of the longest serving mayors of any city in United States history 1942 until his death in 1983 one historian describes Corning s tenure as long on years short on accomplishments 86 Grondahl cited Corning s preference for maintaining the status quo as a factor that held back potential progress during his tenure 87 While Corning brought stability to the office of mayor it is said even those who admire him greatly cannot come up with a sizable list of major concrete Corning achievements 88 Corning is given credit for saving albeit somewhat unintentionally much of Albany s historic architecture l During the 1950s and 1960s a time when federal aid for urban renewal was plentiful 87 Albany did not have growth in its economy or infrastructure It lost more than 20 percent of its population during the Corning years as people moved to newer housing in the suburbs followed by most of the downtown businesses moving there as well 89 While cities across the country grappled with similar issues the problems were magnified in Albany interference from the Democratic political machine hindered progress considerably 87 In 1960 the mayor sold the city s stake in the airport to the county citing budget issues It was known from then on as Albany County Airport until a massive upgrade and modernization project between 1996 and 1998 when it was rechristened Albany International Airport 90 Governor Nelson Rockefeller 1959 1973 R tried to stimulate the city with new monumental architecture and large government sponsored building projects he drove construction of the Empire State Plaza SUNY Albany s uptown campus and much of the W Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus 91 Albany County Republican Chairman Joseph C Frangella once quipped Governor Rockefeller was the best mayor Albany ever had 92 Corning although opposed to the project was responsible for negotiating the payment plan for the Empire State Plaza Rockefeller did not want to be limited by the Legislature s power of the purse so Corning devised a plan to have the county pay for the construction and have the state sign a lease ownership agreement The state paid off the bonds until 2004 It was Rockefeller s only viable option and he agreed Due to the clout Corning gained from the situation he gained inclusion of the State Museum a convention center and a restaurant back in the plans ideas which Rockefeller had originally vetoed The county gained 35 million in fees and the city received 13 million for lost tax revenue Having the state offices in the city enabled it to keep good jobs and retain middle class residents 93 This 1955 map shows the planned expansion of the Interstate Highway System around Albany Another major project of the 1960s and 1970s was the construction of Interstate 787 and the South Mall Arterial m Construction began in the early 1960s One of the project s main results was separating the city from the Hudson River its source of development Writer Paul Grondahl has described Corning as shortsighted with respect to use of the waterfront In Grondahl s view the Mayor could have used his influence to move I 787 away from the Hudson 94 A proposed Mid Crosstown Arterial never came to fruition 95 In 1967 the hamlet of Karlsfeld was the last annexation by the city taken from the Town of Bethlehem 52 When Corning died in 1983 Thomas Whalen assumed the mayorship and was reelected twice He encouraged redevelopment of historic structures and helped attract federal dollars earmarked for that purpose What Corning had saved from destruction Whalen refurbished for continued and new uses 96 The Mayor s Office of Special Events was created in an effort to increase the number of festivals and artistic events in the city including a year long Dongan Charter tricentennial celebration in 1986 97 Whalen is credited for an unparalleled cycle of commercial investment and development in Albany due to his aggressive business development programs 98 Prior to the recession of the 1990s downtown Albany was home to four Fortune 500 companies 99 After the death of Corning and the retirement of Congressman Sam Stratton the political environment changed Long term office holders became rare in the 1980s Local media began following the drama surrounding county politics specifically that of the newly created county executive position the loss of Corning and eventually the machine led to a lack of interest in city politics 100 The election of Gerald Jennings was a surprise and he served as Mayor from 1994 until his retirement at the end of 2013 His tenure essentially ended the political machine that had been in place since the 1920s 101 During the 1990s the State Legislature approved the 234 million Albany Plan a building and renovation project that was the most ambitious building project to affect the area since the Rockefeller era Under the Albany Plan renovation and new building projects were initiated around the downtown area Many state workers were relocated from the Harriman State Office Campus to downtown helping its retail businesses and vitality 9 Fortune 500 companies with offices in Albany include American Express J P Morgan and Chase 102 Merrill Lynch 103 104 General Electric Verizon Goldman Sachs 105 International Paper 106 and Key Bank 107 Albany won the All America City Award in both 1991 and 2009 108 Albany as viewed from the Capitol looking southeast c 1906 City Hall is left of center the twin spires of the Immaculate Conception church can be seen on the far right the future Empire State Plaza is located at the extreme right of the image Geography Edit City of Albany Albany is about 150 miles 240 km north of New York City on the Hudson River 21 It has a total area of 21 8 square miles 56 km2 of which 21 4 square miles 55 km2 is land and 0 4 square miles 1 0 km2 1 8 is water 109 The city is bordered on the north by the town of Colonie along with the village of Menands on the west by the town of Guilderland and on the south by the town of Bethlehem 110 The Hudson River represents the city s eastern border Patroon Creek near the northern border and the Normans Kill along the southern border are the two major streams in the city citation needed The former Foxes Creek Beaver Kill and Rutten Kill were diverted underground in the 19th century 111 112 113 There are four lakes within city limits Buckingham Lake Rensselaer Lake at the mouth of the Patroon Creek Tivoli Lake which was formed as a reservoir and once connected to the Patroon Creek and Washington Park Lake which was formed by damming the Beaver Kill 110 112 The Albany Pine Bush is the only sizable inland pine barrens sand dune ecosystem in the United States 114 The highest natural point in Albany is a USGS benchmark near the Loudonville Reservoir off Birch Hill Road at 378 feet 115 m above sea level The lowest point is sea level at the Hudson River the average water elevation is 2 feet 0 61 m 110 115 verification needed which is still technically an estuary at Albany and is affected by the Atlantic tide 116 The interior of Albany consists of rolling hills which were once part of the Albany Pine Bush an area of pitch pine and scrub oak and has arid sandy soil that is a remnant of the ancient Lake Albany Due to development the Pine Bush has shrunk from an original 25 000 to 6 000 acres 10 100 to 2 400 ha today A preserve was set up by the State Legislature in 1988 and is on the city s western edge spilling into Guilderland and Colonie 117 it is the only sizable inland pine barrens sand dune ecosystem in the United States 114 and is home to many endangered species including the Karner Blue butterfly 118 Climate Edit Albany is in the humid continental climate zone Koppen climate classification Dfa 119 and features cold snowy winters and hot humid summers the city experiences four distinct seasons Albany is in plant hardiness zone 6a near downtown and along the shore of the Hudson and 5b at its western end 120 Albany receives 40 7 inches 1 030 mm of precipitation per year 121 with 138 days of at least 0 01 in 0 25 mm of precipitation each year Snowfall is significant totaling 59 4 inches 151 cm per season 121 but with less accumulation than the lake effect areas to the north and west as it is farther from Lake Ontario However Albany is close enough to the Atlantic coast to receive heavy snow from Nor easters and the city occasionally receives Alberta clippers 122 Winters can be very cold with fluctuating conditions temperatures drop to 0 F 18 C or below on nine nights per annum 123 Summers in Albany can contain stretches of excessive heat and humidity with temperatures of 90 F 32 C or hotter on nine days per year 123 Record temperature extremes range from 28 F 33 C on January 19 1971 to 104 F 40 C on July 4 1911 123 Climate data for Albany International Airport New York 1991 2020 normals n extremes 1874 present o Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 71 22 74 23 89 32 93 34 97 36 100 38 104 40 102 39 100 38 91 33 82 28 72 22 104 40 Mean maximum F C 54 5 12 5 54 5 12 5 65 9 18 8 80 9 27 2 87 8 31 0 92 0 33 3 92 7 33 7 90 6 32 6 87 0 30 6 77 8 25 4 67 7 19 8 56 4 13 6 94 5 34 7 Average high F C 32 8 0 4 36 0 2 2 45 3 7 4 59 2 15 1 71 2 21 8 79 4 26 3 83 9 28 8 82 0 27 8 74 4 23 6 61 6 16 4 49 3 9 6 38 2 3 4 59 4 15 2 Daily mean F C 24 4 4 2 26 8 2 9 35 7 2 1 48 1 8 9 59 6 15 3 68 4 20 2 73 1 22 8 71 4 21 9 63 5 17 5 51 4 10 8 40 5 4 7 30 4 0 9 49 4 9 7 Average low F C 15 9 8 9 17 6 8 0 26 1 3 3 36 9 2 7 48 1 8 9 57 4 14 1 62 4 16 9 60 7 15 9 52 6 11 4 41 1 5 1 31 6 0 2 22 7 5 2 39 4 4 1 Mean minimum F C 6 0 21 1 2 4 19 1 7 8 13 4 23 7 4 6 33 8 1 0 43 3 6 3 51 5 10 8 48 9 9 4 37 6 3 1 27 0 2 8 16 0 8 9 4 6 15 2 8 4 22 4 Record low F C 28 33 22 30 21 29 9 13 26 3 35 2 40 4 34 1 24 4 16 9 11 24 22 30 28 33 Average precipitation inches mm 2 60 66 2 28 58 3 09 78 3 11 79 3 41 87 4 05 103 4 55 116 3 76 96 3 73 95 3 85 98 2 99 76 3 26 83 40 68 1 033 Average snowfall inches cm 15 6 40 13 7 35 12 0 30 1 6 4 1 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 76 2 6 6 6 13 3 34 59 2 150 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 12 7 10 6 11 8 12 2 12 7 12 2 11 4 11 0 9 7 11 2 11 1 12 6 139 2Average snowy days 0 1 in 10 1 7 8 5 7 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 4 7 0 34 5Average relative humidity 71 1 68 5 64 8 61 2 65 5 69 5 70 5 74 1 75 7 72 4 73 1 73 9 70 0Average dew point F C 12 9 10 6 14 5 9 7 22 6 5 2 32 2 0 1 45 0 7 2 55 0 12 8 60 3 15 7 59 4 15 2 52 3 11 3 40 3 4 6 31 1 0 5 19 4 7 0 37 1 2 8 Mean monthly sunshine hours 141 1 158 5 200 3 218 9 248 9 262 2 289 2 253 2 210 5 168 8 100 7 108 3 2 360 6Percent possible sunshine 48 54 54 54 55 57 62 59 56 49 34 38 53Average ultraviolet index 1 2 4 5 7 8 8 7 6 3 2 1 5Source 1 NOAA relative humidity dew point and sun 1961 1990 121 123 124 Source 2 Weather Atlas 125 Crime EditNew York has an effective statewide crime rate of 385 100 000 people as of 2009 update 126 Albany s violent crime rate is nearly on a par with Rochester 1028 violent crimes 100 000 population vs 968 100 000 in Rochester and much lower than Buffalo at 1514 100 000 By comparison New York City s violent crime rate was 639 100 000 in 2013 127 Cityscape Edit Panorama of Albany and the Hudson River from Rensselaer looking southwest Neighborhoods Edit Main article Neighborhoods of Albany New York Housing in Ten Broeck Triangle a subset of the Arbor Hill neighborhood The neighborhoods of Albany 128 129 include Arbor Hill 130 Center Square an eclectic mix of residential and commercial buildings including bars night clubs restaurants and stores 131 Pine Hills 132 and the South End 133 Parks and recreation Edit The 1929 Washington Park Lake House replaced a wooden lake house built in 1876 134 Albany has more than 60 public parks and recreation areas 135 Washington Park was organized as the Middle Public Square in 1806 Its current location has been public property since the Dongan Charter of 1686 gave the city title to all property not privately owned Washington Park was designed by John Bogart and John Cuyler in 1870 136 and opened for public use the following year The original lake house designed by Frederick W Brown was added in 1876 The park had previously been used as a cemetery its graves were moved to Albany Rural Cemetery Washington Park is a popular place to exercise and play sports skate during the winter people watch during Tulip Fest and attend plays at the amphitheater during the summer 136 137 138 139 Empire State Plaza Lincoln Park is flanked on the north by the Empire State Plaza Other parks in Albany include Lincoln Park Buckingham Park the Corning Preserve and the Pine Bush Lincoln Park southwest of the Empire State Plaza was organized in 1886 and was originally known as Beaver Park 140 Today the park has a pool that is open during the summer months Buckingham Lake Park is between Manning Boulevard and Route 85 in the Buckingham Pond neighborhood it contains a pond with fountains a footpath a playground and picnic tables 141 The Albany Riverfront Park at the Corning Preserve has an 800 seat amphitheatre that hosts events in non winter months most notably the Alive at 5 summer concert series The Preserve s visitors center details the ecology of the Hudson River and the local environment 142 The park has a bike trail and boat launch 142 and was effectively separated from downtown by Interstate 787 until the opening of the Hudson River Way in 2002 143 Other public parks include Westland Hill Park Hoffman Park Beverwyck Park 144 and Liberty Park today a small circular grassy patch in downtown on Hudson Avenue which is Albany s oldest park 145 Ridgefield Park is home to the clay courts of the Albany Tennis Club one of the oldest tennis clubs in the United States 146 The municipal golf course New Course at Albany was constructed in 1929 as the Albany Municipal Golf Course later renamed the Capital Hills at Albany and remodeled in 1991 147 Architecture Edit Main article Architecture of Albany New York See also List of tallest buildings in Albany New York The New York State Capitol Aerial view of Albany looking northeast System Administration Building of the State University of New York The Empire State Plaza a collection of state agency office buildings dominates almost any view of Albany Built between 1965 and 1978 at the hand of Governor Nelson A Rockefeller and architect Wallace Harrison the complex is a powerful example of late American modern architecture 148 and remains a controversial building project both for displacing city residents and for its architectural style The most recognizable aspect of the complex is the Erastus Corning Tower the tallest building in New York outside of New York City 148 Juxtaposed at the north end of the Plaza is the 19th century New York State Capitol the seat of the New York State Legislature and the home of the Governor s office 149 This 1789 etching shows the Dutch influence on the architecture of early Albany Albany s initial architecture incorporated many Dutch influences followed soon after by those of the English 150 Quackenbush House a Dutch Colonial brick mansion was built c 1736 151 Schuyler Mansion a Georgian style mansion was built in 1765 152 and the oldest building in Albany is the 1728 Van Ostrande Radliff House at 48 Hudson Avenue 153 Albany s housing varies greatly with mostly row houses in the older sections of town closer to the river Housing type quickly changes as one travels westward beginning with two family homes of the late 19th century and one family homes built after World War II in the western end of the city 154 Albany City Hall designed by Henry Hobson Richardson was opened in 1883 The New York State Capitol was opened in 1899 after 32 years of construction 149 at a cost of 25 million making it the most expensive government building at the time 155 Albany s Union Station a major Beaux Arts design 156 was under construction at the same time it opened in 1900 In 1912 the Beaux Arts styled New York State Department of Education Building opened on Washington Avenue near the Capitol It has a classical exterior which features a block long white marble colonnade 157 The 1920s brought the Art Deco movement which is illustrated by the Home Savings Bank Building 1927 on North Pearl Street 158 and the Alfred E Smith Building 1930 on South Swan Street 159 two of Albany s tallest high rises 160 Architecture from the 1960s and 1970s is well represented in the city especially at the W Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus 1950s and 1960s and on the uptown campus of the University at Albany 1962 1971 The state office campus was planned in the 1950s by governor W Averell Harriman to offer more parking and easier access for state employees 161 The uptown SUNY campus was built in the 1960s under Governor Rockefeller on the site of the city owned Albany Country Club Straying from the popular open campus layout SUNY Albany has a centralized building layout with administrative and classroom buildings at center surrounded by four student housing towers The design called for much use of concrete and glass and the style has slender round topped columns and pillars reminiscent of those at Lincoln Center in New York City 162 Downtown has seen a revival in recent decades often considered to have begun with Norstar Bank s renovation of the former Union Station as its corporate headquarters in 1986 p The Times Union Center TU Center was originally slated for suburban Colonie 164 but was instead built downtown and opened in 1990 165 Other development in downtown includes the construction of the State Dormitory Authority headquarters at 515 Broadway 1998 166 the State Department of Environmental Conservation building with its iconic green dome at 625 Broadway 2001 167 the State Comptroller headquarters on State Street 2001 168 the Hudson River Way 2002 a pedestrian bridge connecting Broadway to the Corning Preserve 143 and 677 Broadway 2005 the first privately owned downtown office building in a generation 169 170 Demographics EditCity of immigrants Edit Historical populationCensus Pop 17903 498 18005 34952 9 181010 762101 2 182012 63017 4 183024 20991 7 184033 72139 3 185050 76350 5 186062 36722 9 187069 42211 3 188090 75830 7 189094 9234 6 190094 151 0 8 1910100 2536 5 1920113 34413 1 1930127 41212 4 1940130 5772 5 1950134 9953 4 1960129 726 3 9 1970115 781 10 7 1980101 727 12 1 1990101 082 0 6 200095 658 5 4 201097 8562 3 202099 2241 4 Sources 1790 1950 171 1960 1980 172 1990 2000 173 2010 2020 174 Historically Albany s population has been mixed First dominated by Mohican and Mohawk then Dutch and Germans it was overtaken by the English in the early 19th century Irish immigrants soon outnumbered most other ethnicities by the mid 19th century and were followed by Italians and Poles In the mid to late 20th century the African American population increased with thousands of people from the rural South as part of the Great Migration As historian and Albany Assemblyman John McEneny puts it Dutch and Yankee German and Irish Polish and Italian black and Chinese over the centuries Albany s heritage has reflected a succession of immigrant nationalities Its streets have echoed with a dozen languages its neighborhoods adapting to the distinctive life style and changing economic fortunes of each new group 175 Until after the Revolution Albany s population consisted mostly of ethnic Dutch descendants Settlers migrating from New England tipped the balance toward British ethnicity in the early 19th century 176 Jobs on the turnpikes canals and railroads attracted floods of Irish immigrants in the early 19th century especially in the 1840s during the Great Famine solidifying the city s Irish base Albany elected its first Irish Catholic mayor Michael Nolan two years before Boston did 177 Polish and Italian immigrants began arriving in Albany in the wave of immigration in the latter part of the 19th century Their numbers were smaller than in many other eastern cities mainly because most had found manufacturing jobs at General Electric in Schenectady 178 The Jewish community had been established early with Sephardic Jewish members as part of the Beverwijck community Its population rose during the late 19th century when many Ashkenazi Jews immigrated from eastern Europe 178 In that period there was also an influx of Chinese and east Asian immigrants who settled in the downtown section of the city Many of their descendants have since moved to suburban areas 179 Immigration plummeted after the Immigration Act of 1924 citation needed Albany was also a destination of internal migration as many African Americans moved north in their Great Migration from the rural South before and after World War I to fill industrial positions and find new opportunities In the early years African Americans lived together with Italians Jews and other immigrants in the South End where housing was older and less expensive 180 The black community has grown as a proportion of the population since then African Americans made up three percent of the city s population in 1950 six percent in 1960 12 percent in 1970 and 30 percent in 2010 The change in proportion is related mostly to middle class white families moving to the suburbs and black families remaining within city limits during the same time period 6 173 Since 2007 the number of Burmese refugees to Albany has increased The Burmese refugee community consists mostly of persons of Karen ethnicity An estimated 5 000 Burmese refugees reside in Albany as of January 2015 update 181 182 Modern overview Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2021 With a 2013 Census estimated population of 1 1 million 183 the Capital District is the third most populous metropolitan region in the state As of April 1 2020 Albany s population is 99 224 184 As of the 2010 census 173 Albany s population density was 4 572 7 per square mile 1 779 2 km2 There were 46 362 housing units at an average density of 2 166 4 per square mile 842 9 km2 5 205 of these units 11 2 were vacant The racial makeup of the city residents was 52 3 white 27 black or African American 0 06 Native American or Native Alaskan 7 4 Asian 0 1 Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander 06 from other races and 3 6 from two or more races A total of 9 2 of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race q Non Hispanic Whites were 52 0 of the population in 2010 109 compared to 87 0 in 1970 185 As of 2010 20 0 of Albany s population was under the age of 18 19 3 was aged 18 to 24 29 2 was aged 25 to 44 18 1 was aged 45 to 64 and 13 4 was aged 65 years or older The median age was 31 4 years For every 100 females there were 90 6 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 86 5 males Some 81 3 of the population had completed high school or earned an equivalency diploma 173 As of the 2000 census the top five ancestry groups in the city were African American 27 Irish 18 1 Italian 12 4 German 10 4 and English 5 2 33 1 of the population reported other ancestries Albany is home to a Triqui language speaking community of Mexican Americans 186 187 There were 40 709 households in Albany in 2000 out of which 22 0 had children under the age of 18 living with them 25 3 were married couples living together 16 1 had a female householder with no husband present and 54 8 were non families 41 9 of all households were made up of individuals and 11 5 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 11 and the average family size was 2 95 173 The median income for a household in the city in 2000 was 81 399 and the median income for a family was 84 480 male year round worker and 76 635 female year round worker The per capita income for the city was 62 270 188 r About 16 0 of families and 21 7 of the population were below the poverty line including 28 8 of those under age 18 and 12 5 of those age 65 or over 173 The rate of reported violent crimes for 2008 1 095 incidents per 100 000 residents were more than double the rate for similarly sized US cities Reported property crimes 4 669 incidents per 100 000 residents were somewhat lower 189 190 Demographically speaking the population of Albany and the Capital District mirrors the characteristics of the United States consumer population as a whole better than any other major municipality in the country According to a 2004 study conducted by the Acxiom Corporation Albany and its environs are the top ranked standard test market for new business and retail products Albany Rochester and Syracuse all scored within the top five 191 According to the 2020 American Community Survey the Latino population was 4 57 Puerto Rican 1 45 Dominican 84 Ecuadorian 77 Mexican 69 Salvadoran 22 Cuban 192 Culture EditMain article Culture in New York s Capital District Nightlife and entertainment Edit Price Chopper sponsors the annual Fourth of July fireworks show at the Empire State Plaza 2009 show pictured 193 Albany s geographic situation roughly equidistant from New York City to the south and Montreal to the north makes it a convenient stop for nationally touring artists and acts The Palace Theatre and The Egg are mid sized forums for music theater and spoken word performances the Capital Repertory Theatre is smaller 194 The TU Center is the city s largest musical venue for nationally and internationally prominent bands It also hosts trade shows sporting events and other large gatherings 195 Some people praise the cultural contributions of Albany and the greater Capital District 97 others suggest that the city has a cultural identity crisis due to its widespread geography which requires a car to reach most of what the area has to offer a necessity not seen in larger and more densely populated metropolitan areas such as New York and Boston 196 In recent years the city s government has invested resources to cultivate venues and neighborhoods that attract after hours business Madison Avenue Pearl Street Delaware Avenue and Lark Street are the most active entertainment areas in the city Many restaurants clubs and bars have opened since the mid 1990s revitalizing areas that had once been abandoned and reclaiming old row houses businesses and a pump station 194 Bars are concentrated in three areas about two blocks on Park Street downtown along Lark Street home to smaller bars which fit the neighborhood s artistic and eclectic style and Western and Madison Avenues in midtown centered on the College of Saint Rose and SUNY Albany s downtown campus and drawing younger people 197 Much of the bar restaurant scene features classic Irish Pubs 198 Last call in Albany is 4 00 a m nightly New York law sets that time as last call statewide although counties may set an earlier time municipalities may not More than half of the state s counties have an earlier closing time Albany County like all counties in the Capital District does not 199 Festivals Edit An artist paints tulips during the Tulip Fest at Washington Park Alive at 5 is a free weekly concert series held downtown during the summer on Thursdays 200 with 10 concerts in 2010 total attendance was roughly 100 000 201 The Tulip Festival is set in Washington Park and celebrates the city s Dutch heritage which began with Pinkster Festival an African Dutch Celebration 202 This traditional Albany event marks the beginning of spring as thousands of tulips bloom in the park in early May 203 attendance to the Tulip Festival in 2010 was approximately 80 000 201 Another large festival in Albany is the Capital Pride Parade and Festival a major gay pride event held each June attended by an estimated 30 000 spectators annually from across Upstate New York 204 The Capital Gay Pride Parade and Festival is the largest celebration of LGBTQ culture in Upstate New York The Price Chopper Fabulous Fourth and Fireworks Festival at the Empire State Plaza celebrates Independence Day with musical performances and the region s largest fireworks display 193 Freihofer s Run for Women is a 5 kilometer run through the city that draws more than 4 000 participants from across the country it is an annual event that began in 1978 205 The Albany Chefs Food amp Wine Festival Wine amp Dine for the Arts is an annual Festival that hosts more than 3500 people over 3 days The Festival showcases more than 70 Regional Chefs amp Restaurants 250 Global Wines amp Spirits a NYS Craft Beer Pavilion 4 competitions The Signature Chef Invitational Rising Star Chef Barista Albany and Battle of the Bartenders and one Grand Gala Reception Dinner amp Auction featuring 10 f Albany s Iconic Chefs The Albany Chefs Food amp Wine Festival donates all net proceeds to deserving Albany Arts Organizations and is held the Thursday Saturday preceding Martin Luther King Weekend Smaller events include the African American Family Day Arts Festival each August at the Empire State Plaza 193 the Latin Fest held each August at the Corning Preserve 206 the Albany Jazz Festival an annual end of summer event held at the Corning Preserve 207 and Lark Fest a music and art festival held each fall 208 Museums and historic sites Edit Main article National Register of Historic Places listings in Albany New York Southwest corner of the Cultural Education Center on Empire State Plaza housing the State Museum Library and Archives Because of Albany s historical and political significance the city has numerous museums historical buildings and historic districts Albany is home to the New York State Museum the New York State Library and the New York State Archives all three facilities are in the Cultural Education Center at the south end of Empire State Plaza and are free to the public 209 The USS Slater DE 766 a decommissioned World War II destroyer escort that was restored in 1998 is a museum ship docked in the Hudson River at Quay Street It is the only ship of its kind still afloat 210 The Albany Heritage Area Visitors Center at the corner of Clinton Avenue and Broadway at Quackenbush Square hosts a museum gift shop and the Henry Hudson Planetarium 211 In early 2012 the Irish American Heritage Museum opened in downtown Albany The museum is home to exhibits highlighting the contributions of the Irish people in America 212 The Albany Institute of History and Art on Washington Avenue near the Center Square Neighborhood and State Capitol is dedicated to collecting preserving interpreting and promoting interest in the history art culture of Albany and the Upper Hudson Valley region The museum s most notable permanent exhibits include an extensive collection of paintings by the Hudson River School and an exhibit on Ancient Egypt featuring the institute s Albany Mummies Ten Broeck Mansion is home to the Albany County Historical Association 213 Albany is home to 57 listings on the National Register of Historic Places 214 NRHP and five National Historic Landmarks 215 The Ten Broeck Mansion a 1797 Federal style mansion later renovated in the Greek Revival style built for Abraham Ten Broeck mayor of Albany 1779 1783 and 1796 1798 216 is a historic house museum and the headquarters of the Albany County Historical Association 213 it was added to the NRHP in 1971 217 Later known as Arbor Hill it gave the current neighborhood its name 218 Literature and film Edit Albany has been the subject inspiration or location for many written and cinematic works Many non fiction works have been written on the city One of the city s more notable claims to fame is Ironweed 1983 the 1984 Pulitzer Prize winning book by Albany native William Kennedy Ironweed was the third in a series of books by Kennedy known as the Albany Cycle 219 220 The elusive author Trevanian also grew up in Albany and wrote The Crazyladies of Pearl Street 2005 about a North Albany neighborhood along Pearl Street The book is considered a semi autobiographical memoir 221 In 1987 the film version of Ironweed premiered at the Palace Theatre 222 The movie starred Jack Nicholson and Meryl Streep each of whom were nominated for Academy Awards for their performances 223 much of the filming was done on location in Albany 222 Most recently the downtown area was the site of filming for the action thriller Salt starring Angelina Jolie 224 and the action comedy The Other Guys starring Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg 225 Authors Herman Melville and Henry James lived with their families in Albany when young before their careers James identified his character Isabel Archer the heroine of his novel The Portrait of a Lady as being from Albany 226 Gregory Maguire author of Wicked The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West adapted for the Broadway hit Wicked grew up in North Albany 227 and graduated from SUNY Albany 228 Education EditSee also List of colleges and universities in New York s Capital District and List of school districts in New York s Capital District Albany High School is the central high school of the City School District of Albany 229 The City School District of Albany CSDA operates the city s public school system which consists of 17 schools and learning centers 229 in addition there are 7 charter schools 230 including Green Tech Charter High School 231 and Albany Leadership High School 232 s In the 2015 2016 school year over 9 000 students were enrolled in the public school system 229 The district had an average class size of 18 236 an 81 percent graduation rate t and a 5 percent dropout rate 237 The district s 2010 11 budget is 202 8 million 238 Although considered by the state to be one of the lowest achieving high schools in New York Albany High was listed as the nation s 976th best high school in a 2010 Newsweek Washington Post report 239 Albany also has a number of private schools including the coed Bishop Maginn High School and Albany Free School the all boys Albany Academy u and the all girls Academy of the Holy Names and Albany Academy for Girls 241 State Quad is one of the four iconic dormitory towers at SUNY Albany s Uptown Campus 242 Albany has a prominent history in higher education and was ranked third in a Forbes survey called The Best Places with the Best Education in 2005 243 it ranked top on Forbes IQ Campuses list as part of its 150 Cheap Places to Live series in 2006 244 The Albany Medical College private today part of Albany Medical Center was founded in 1838 Albany Law School private is the oldest law school in New York and the fourth oldest in the country it was opened in 1851 President William McKinley was an alumnus The Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences private is the second oldest pharmacy school in New York and the fifteenth oldest in the United States The New York State Normal School one of the oldest teachers colleges in the United States opened in 1844 it was later known as the State Teachers College It eventually evolved into the University at Albany also known as SUNY Albany public which inherited the Normal School s original downtown campus on Western Avenue The center of the campus moved to its current Uptown Campus in the west end of the city in 1970 SUNY Albany is a unit of the State University of New York and one of only four university centers in the system 242 Other colleges and universities in Albany include Empire State College The College of Saint Rose Excelsior College Maria College Mildred Elley and Sage College of Albany Nearby Hudson Valley Community College HVCC fills the community college niche in the Albany Troy area 245 The effect of the campuses on the city s population is substantial Combining the student bodies of all the aforementioned campuses except HVCC results in 63 149 students or almost 70 percent of the 2008 estimate of Albany s permanent population 246 Economy EditMain article Economy of New York s Capital District One Commerce Plaza 247 Albany s economy along with that of the Capital District in general is heavily dependent on government health care education and more recently technology Because of these typically steady economic bases the local economy has been relatively immune to national economic recessions in the past 248 More than 25 percent of the city s population works in government related positions 249 Albany s estimated daytime population is more than 162 000 Companies based in Albany include Trans World Entertainment AMRI Global and Clough Harbour Albany has the fourth highest amount of lawyers in its employment pool 7 5 lawyers per 1 000 jobs compared to the rest of the nation behind Washington D C Trenton New Jersey and New York City respectively 250 Tech Valley Edit Main article Tech Valley SUNY Polytechnic Institute s College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering embodies Albany s emerging high tech industry 248 Since the 2000s the economy of Albany and the surrounding Capital District has been redirected toward a high technology focus Tech Valley is a marketing name for the eastern part of New York State encompassing Albany the Capital District and the Hudson Valley 251 Originated in 1998 to promote the greater Albany area as a high tech competitor to regions such as Silicon Valley and Boston it has since grown to represent the counties in the Capital District and extending to 19 counties from IBM s Westchester County plants in the south to the Canada US border in the north The area s high technology ecosystem is supported by technologically focused academic institutions including Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the State University of New York Polytechnic Institute 252 Tech Valley encompasses 19 counties straddling both sides of the Adirondack Northway and the New York Thruway 251 and with heavy state taxpayer subsidy has experienced significant growth in the computer hardware side of the high technology industry 248 with great strides in the nanotechnology sector digital electronics design and water and electricity dependent integrated microchip circuit manufacturing 253 Government EditSee also Government of New York state List of mayors of Albany New York and Mayoral elections in Albany New York Albany City Hall an 1883 Richardsonian Romanesque structure is the seat of Albany s government Albany has a Strong mayor council form of government which functions under the Dongan Charter which was granted by colonial governor Thomas Dongan in 1686 when Albany was incorporated as a city A revised charter was adopted by referendum in 1998 but was legally reckoned as an amendment to the Dongan Charter This gives Albany the distinction of having the oldest active city charter in the United States and arguably the longest running instrument of municipal government in the Western Hemisphere 8 254 The mayor who is elected every four years heads the executive branch of city government 255 The current mayor Kathy Sheehan was first elected in 2013 She replaced former mayor Gerald Jennings who was mayor for 20 years from 1994 to 2013 256 The Common Council represents the legislative branch of city government and is made up of fifteen council members each elected from one ward and an at large Common Council President 254 The current president is Corey Ellis 257 he began his term in January 2018 258 While Albany has its own city government it has also been the seat of Albany County since the county s formation in 1683 and the capital of New York since 1797 As such the city is home to all branches of the county and state governments as well as its own Albany City Hall sits on Eagle Street opposite the State Capitol 259 and the Albany County Office Building is on State Street 260 The state government has offices scattered throughout the city Albany is in the 20th Congressional district represented by Paul Tonko D in the United States House of Representatives The city is represented by Chuck Schumer D 261 and Kirsten Gillibrand D 262 in the United States Senate On the state level the city is in the 44th district in the New York Senate represented by Neil Breslin D In the New York Assembly western Albany is in the 109th district represented by Patricia Fahy D while downtown and eastern Albany are in the 108th district represented by John T McDonald III D As the seat of Albany County the city is the location of the county s courts including Family Court County Court Surrogate Court Supreme Court and New York Court of Appeals 263 Albany is the site of a federal courthouse that houses the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York 264 Politics Edit Albany s politics have been dominated by the Democratic Party since the 1920s Daniel Uncle Dan O Connell established a political machine in the city with the election of William Stormont Hackett as mayor in 1922 265 Prior to that William Barnes Jr had set up a Republican machine in the 1890s Barnes success is attributed to the fact that he owned two newspapers in Albany and that he was the grandson of Thurlow Weed the influential newspaper publisher and political boss 266 O Connell s organization overcame Barnes in 1922 and survived well into the 1980s even after his death as the machine put forth candidates for whom the electorate dutifully voted In many instances votes were outright bought 267 it was not uncommon for the machine to buy poor folks loyalty and trust with a fiver 268 Gerald Jennings upset in the 1993 Democratic mayoral primary over Harold Joyce who had the Democratic Party s formal endorsement and had only recently been its county chairman is often cited as the end of the O Connell era in Albany 269 In the early 21st century Albany continued to be dominated by the Democratic Party Democratic Party enrollment in the city was 38 862 in 2009 while Republican enrollment was 3 487 270 As of 2022 every elected city position had been held by a Democrat since 1931 271 In November 2013 Kathy Sheehan became the first woman to be elected Mayor of Albany 272 Religious life Edit The First Church in Albany Reformed is the oldest congregation in Upstate New York 273 Like most cities of comparable age and size Albany has well established Orthodox Christian Roman Catholic Protestant and Jewish communities Albany is home to the oldest Christian congregation in Upstate New York and the Mother Churches of two Christian dioceses As of June 2010 update eight churches or religious buildings in the city were listed on the National Register of Historic Places 214 one of which St Peter s Episcopal Church on State Street is a National Historic Landmark 215 Established in 1642 274 the congregation of the First Church in Albany Reformed also known as the North Dutch Church lon North Pearl Street is the second oldest Reformed Church in America 273 The Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception Eagle Street and Madison Avenue built 1852 is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany led by Bishop Edward Scharfenberger 275 276 and the Cathedral of All Saints South Swan Street and Elk Street built 1888 is the cathedral of the Episcopal Diocese of Albany 277 278 As of 2010 the city was home to eleven Catholic churches 279 and six Episcopal churches 280 Despite its history of Christendom the Albany metropolitan area was found to be among the most post Christian cities in the United States in a 2019 study by the Barna Group 281 282 283 A significant Jewish presence has existed in Albany as early as 1658 284 As of 2010 Albany is home to two Conservative synagogues a Chabad Lubavitch synagogue an Orthodox synagogue and two Reform synagogues 285 Albany is also home to one of the few Karaite synagogues outside Israel 286 verification needed As of 2008 the total membership in Albany s synagogues was estimated at 12 000 13 000 with half the members residing outside the city 284 Since the early 2000s there has been an increase in Orthodox Jews moving to Albany from the New York Metro area largely due to cheaper housing prices and closer walking proximity to synagogues 287 There is a sizable Islamic community in Albany and its surrounding suburbs with at least four major mosques in the region While there has been a relatively small presence of Muslims for several decades the population has significantly increased since around 2010 with the arrival of hundreds of refugees from countries such as Iraq Syria and Afghanistan Exact numbers on religious denominations in Albany are not readily available Demographic statistics in the United States depend heavily on the United States Census Bureau which cannot ask about religious affiliation as part of its decennial census 288 It does compile some national and statewide religious statistics 289 but these are not representative of a city the size of Albany One report from 2000 offers religious affiliations for Albany County According to the data 59 2 of Albany County residents identified as Christian 47 are Roman Catholic 8 4 are mainline Protestants 2 7 are Evangelical Protestants and 1 1 are Eastern or Oriental Orthodox Christians Residents who practice Judaism make up 4 2 of the population and Muslims represent 0 2 290 Media EditMain article Media in New York s Capital District WTEN headquarters pictured WXXA and Spectrum News broadcast from within city limits The Times Union is Albany s primary daily newspaper and the only one based close to the city its headquarters moved from within city limits to suburban Colonie in the 1960s after a dispute with Mayor Corning over land needed for expansion 291 Its circulation totals about 73 000 on weekdays and 143 000 on Sundays 292 Serving Albany to a lesser degree are The Daily Gazette based in Schenectady 293 and The Record of Troy 294 Metroland is the alternative newsweekly in the area publishing each Thursday 295 while The Business Review is a business weekly published each Friday 296 The Legislative Gazette another weekly newspaper focuses exclusively on issues related to the Legislature and the state government 297 As of 2010 the Albany Schenectady Troy media market is the 63rd largest in the country in terms of radio 298 and the 57th largest in terms of television audiences 299 It is a broadcast market with historical significance The pioneering influence of General Electric in Schenectady directly contributed to the area emerging as the birthplace of station based television with WRGB the station was also the first affiliate of NBC 300 In 1947 the region was home to the first independently owned and operated commercial FM radio station in the United States W47A 300 WGY was the second commercial radio station in New York and the twelfth in the nation 300 The Capital District is home to ABC affiliate WTEN 10 301 CBS affiliate WRGB 6 also operating CW affiliate WCWN 45 302 Fox affiliate WXXA 23 303 NBC affiliate WNYT 13 also operating MyNetworkTV affiliate WNYA 51 304 and PBS member station WMHT 17 Charter Communications hosts Spectrum News Capital Region the area s only local 24 hour news channel 305 The area has numerous radio stations Transportation EditSee also Streets of Albany New York Highways Edit The Northway Interstate 87 north of the New York State Thruway connects Albany by car to Canada at Champlain Autoroute 15 continues into Quebec linking Albany to Montreal Interstate 90 connects Albany to both Buffalo and Boston via the New York State Thruway and the Massachusetts Turnpike respectively both of which use I 90 the NYS Thruway partially the Massachusetts Turnpike fully South of Albany I 87 becomes part of the Thruway and ends at Interstate 278 in the Bronx Albany is at the crossroad of I 87 and I 90 creating a junction between Buffalo Boston Montreal and New York Interstate 787 links Albany to Watervliet Colonie and Menands By way of Route 7 I 787 connects to the Northway 306 better source needed Trains Edit Albany Rensselaer Amtrak Station Since the closure of Union Station on Broadway area passenger rail service is provided by Amtrak at the Albany Rensselaer station across the river in Rensselaer In 2009 the station saw more than 720 000 passengers making it Amtrak s second busiest in New York behind Manhattan s Penn Station 307 Amtrak provides service south to New York City north to Montreal and Rutland Vermont west to Niagara Falls Toronto and Chicago and east to Boston Airport Edit Albany International Airport Albany s major airport is Albany International Airport in Colonie Major airline service to Albany includes service by American Airlines Cape Air Delta Air Lines Southwest Airlines JetBlue Airlines and United Airlines Million Air is the local fixed base operator 308 In 2010 Albany had the highest average airfare in New York though the per mile cost on its busiest routes was second lowest in the state 309 Bus Edit The Capital District Transportation Authority CDTA provides bus service throughout Albany and the surrounding area including Schenectady Troy and Saratoga Springs 310 The city was once served by an urban streetcar service maintained by the United Traction Company As in many American cities after the advent of the automobile light rail services declined in Albany and were replaced by bus and taxi services 311 Greyhound Lines 312 Trailways 313 Peter Pan 314 Short Line Vermont Translines and Yankee Trails 315 buses all serve a downtown terminal Brown Coach provides commuter service 316 Low cost curbside bus service from the SUNY Albany campus and the Rensselaer station is also provided by Megabus with direct service to New York City Boat Edit The Port of Albany Rensselaer adds 428 million to the Capital District s 70 1 billion gross product 317 Albany long an important Hudson River port today serves domestic and international ships and barges through the Port of Albany Rensselaer on both sides of the river The port has the largest mobile harbor crane in the state of New York 318 The New York State Barge Canal the ultimate successor of the Erie Canal is in use today largely by tourist and private boats 319 Sports EditMain article Sports in New York s Capital District Siena guard Ronald Moore dribbles toward the basket in a game against Loyola in January 2010 320 321 Albany has no major league professional sports teams and minor league teams typically have low support 322 The Albany Devils were a minor league ice hockey team that moved to the city for the 2010 11 season They played in the American Hockey League and were affiliated with the New Jersey Devils of the National Hockey League 323 324 The Devils replaced the Albany River Rats who played in the Capital Region from 1990 to 2010 when they relocated to Charlotte North Carolina The Albany Devils moved to Binghamton New York in 2017 325 The Times Union Center has previously hosted arena football teams including the Albany Firebirds in the Arena Football League AFL from 1990 to 2000 and then a team originally known as the Albany Conquest and later the Firebirds in the af2 the AFL s developmental league from 2002 to 2009 The Albany Empire played in the AFL from 2018 through the 2019 season when the league folded A new Albany Empire was relaunched in the National Arena League for the 2021 season 326 The Tri City ValleyCats short season minor league baseball team have played at the Joseph L Bruno Stadium on the Hudson Valley Community College campus in North Greenbush since 2002 Prior to the ValleyCats arrival the Albany Colonie Diamond Dogs 1995 2002 played at Heritage Park in Colonie due to financial pressures and facing impending competition from the ValleyCats the franchise folded in 2002 327 The Albany Legends International Basketball League played in the Washington Avenue Armory from 2010 to 2014 before moving to Schenectady 328 The Albany Patroons have played at the Armory on and off since 1982 and currently play in The Basketball League 329 With the large number of local colleges and universities around Albany college sports are popular The University at Albany s Great Danes play at the Division I level in all sports The football team is a member of the Colonial Athletic Association while all other sports teams play as members of the America East Conference 330 In 2006 UAlbany became the first SUNY affiliated school to send a team to the NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 331 The Siena Saints saw a rise in popularity after their men s basketball team made it to the NCAA Tournament in 2008 2009 and 2010 332 All 18 Saints teams are Division I and play in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference 333 Although Siena s campus is in nearby Colonie the men s basketball team plays at the Times Union Center 320 UAlbany hosted the New York Giants training camp from 1996 to 2012 334 335 On February 23 2021 it was announced that the National Lacrosse League NLL would return to the city with the relocation of the New England Black Wolves 336 The team was named the Albany FireWolves on April 15 2021 337 This is the second NLL team to be based in the area the first the Albany Attack played in the city from 2000 to 2003 338 Sister cities EditThe city of Nijmegen Netherlands connected with Albany following World War II With the help of the Catholic university in Albany the Catholic University of Nijmegen Radboud University Nijmegen rebuilt its partly destroyed library with over 50 000 books being donated to the Dutch university To show its gratitude for post war assistance the city sent Albany 50 000 tulip bulbs in 1948 this act led to the establishment of the annual Tulip Festival 97 Most of the other connections were made in the 1980s during Mayor Whalen s term in office as part of his cultural expansion program 97 Albany s sister cities are 339 Nassau Bahamas Nijmegen Netherlands Tula Russia Verona ItalySee also EditList of capitals in the United States List of cities in New York List of incorporated places in New York s Capital District List of people associated with Albany County New York National Register of Historic Places listings in Albany New York Neighborhoods of Albany New YorkNotes Edit For the area code MSN Encarta states that this nickname resulted from the meeting here in 1754 of the Albany Congress which adopted Benjamin Franklin s Plan of Union the first formal proposal to unite the colonies 1 In this instance assiduity the quality of acting with constant and careful attention 2 On Birch Hill Road near Loudonville Reservoir Mean water elevation varies with the tide 5 This name would later be adopted by the city of Schenectady to the west 14 The Dongan Charter incorporated Albany three months after New York City s charter was ratified However the latter forfeited its charter during Leisler s Rebellion making Albany s the oldest effective charter in the country 25 26 James Stuart 1633 1701 brother and successor of Charles II was both the Duke of York and Duke of Albany before being crowned king in 1685 His title of Duke of York is the source of the name of the province of New York 27 The Plan of Union s original intention was to unite the colonies in defense against aggressions of the French to the north it was not an attempt to become independent from the auspices of the British crown 38 A rough grid pattern was established in 1764 aligning the streets with Clinton Avenue which marked the northern border of Albany at the time Patroon of the Manor of Rensselaerswyck Stephen Van Rensselaer II followed the same directional system north of Clinton Avenue on his lands however the two systems were not related otherwise which is why cross streets north and south of Clinton Avenue do not align The stockade surrounding the city was taken down shortly before the Revolutionary War allowing for expansion De Witt city surveyor at the time continued the grid pattern to the west and renamed on his 1794 map any streets that had honored British Royalty Hawk Street is the only road that retained its original name the rest were renamed after birds and mammals 46 47 The Colonie made up the current area of Arbor Hill and was the more urban part of the Manor of Rensselaerswyck which surrounded Albany 52 It is the source of the name of the current town and village of Colonie 53 Grondahl summarizes it as This hard line position of isolationism on the part of the machine was a curse economically but a strange blessing unintentionally in architectural terms While downtown went to seed and plans for large scale construction and improvements came to a virtual standstill in Albany without federal money pockets of the city s historic housing stock escaped the wrecking ball 87 The Empire State Plaza was originally known as the South Mall the South Mall Arterial is the only remnant of that naming scheme Mean monthly maxima and minima i e the expected highest and lowest temperature readings at any point during the year or given month calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official records for Albany kept January 1874 to May 1938 at downtown and at Albany Int l since June 1938 For more information see Threadex In 2009 Bank of America which now owns FleetBank the bank that eventually bought Norstar consolidated its operations in an office building on State Street leaving the former train station vacant 163 Mayor Corning made great efforts to save the building which had been owned by his great grandfather s railroad a hundred years before He was able to do it when governor Rockefeller brought state money in to purchase the building 92 The percentages listed here were calculated using the raw population data given by the Census Bureau divided by the total population rounded to the nearest hundredth Note that these percentages were calculated using the total population value of 97 856 as the divisor not the 94 233 people claiming one race 173 These values were given in 1999 dollars here they have been adjusted for inflation 173 Albany was once home to 12 charter schools 233 until the closing of New Covenant Charter School in 2010 234 It was announced in July 2010 that the Harriet Gibbons High School an alternative high school for at risk ninth graders would close after a negative report from the State Department of Education demanded the elimination of ineffective programs 235 The Accountability and Overview Report 236 puts the class of 2009 at 513 students and the Comprehensive Information Report 237 states that 416 of them graduated Christian Brothers Academy was located in various Albany locations throughout the 19th century and then moved to the 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