Jump to content

Oswegatchie River

Coordinates: 44°41′45″N 75°29′51″W / 44.6958958°N 75.4974483°W / 44.6958958; -75.4974483
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 23:22, 22 January 2021 (Task 18 (cosmetic): eval 2 templates: hyphenate params (5×);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Oswegatchie River
Oswegatchie River access on Inlet Road
Oswegatchie River is located in New York Adirondack Park
Oswegatchie River
Location of the mouth
Oswegatchie River is located in the United States
Oswegatchie River
Oswegatchie River (the United States)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew York
RegionAdirondack Mountains
CountiesSt. Lawrence, Jefferson, Herkimer, Hamilton
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • coordinates44°01′13″N 74°49′26″W / 44.0203396°N 74.8237923°W / 44.0203396; -74.8237923
MouthSaint Lawrence River
 • location
Ogdensburg
 • coordinates
44°41′45″N 75°29′51″W / 44.6958958°N 75.4974483°W / 44.6958958; -75.4974483
 • elevation
243 ft (74 m)
Length137 mi (220 km)
Basin size1,592 sq mi (4,120 km2)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftWest Branch Oswegatchie River, Black Lake
Oswegatchie River Dam, Ogdensburg, from a 1907 postcard

The Oswegatchie River is a 137-mile-long (220 km)[1] river in northern New York that flows from the Adirondack Mountains north to the Saint Lawrence River. The Oswegatchie River begins at Partlow Lake in Hamilton County, New York. The river continues through Cranberry Lake which was 'doubled in size' through construction of a dam in the late 1860s. The river continues from the dam to Gouverneur, to near Talcville in St. Lawrence County, where it joins the West Branch. Much of it is within Adirondack State Park. The city of Ogdensburg developed at the mouth of the river at its confluence with the St. Lawrence.

History

The mouth of the Oswegatchie River at the St. Lawrence River, was the site of a Jesuit mission, Fort de La Présentation, founded in 1749. Also a fur trading post, the village had 3,000 Onondaga by the 1750s, most of whom converted to Catholicism. They came to be known as the Oswegatchie; because of their converted status they were considered to be somewhat separate from the traditional Six Nations of the Iroquois.[2] Oswegatchie may be Iroquois for "going or coming around a hill". William Bright says the name may come from the Onondaga word /oshewɛ'gaaji'/, meaning "black lumber," containing -shewɛ'gar-, "lumber", and -ji-, "be black".[3] The Oswegatchie were considered by the British as one of the Seven Nations of Canada.

Branches

The river is composed of the main branch and two branches named West and Middle, in addition to major inflow from various tributaries before and after their confluences. All of the branches begin in the Five Ponds Wilderness, with the East Branch Oswegatchie beginning at Partlow Lake, which is privately owned by one of William Seward Webb's descendants. The family is known to be planning to donate the property to New York via an easement agreement, late in the next decade.[citation needed] One of its branches, the Robinson River, begins at Crooked Lake.

The Middle Branch headwaters are Willy's and Walker lakes with one of its headwaters, an unnamed pond, separated from Crooked Lake by approximately fifty feet of land.

The West Branch Oswegatchie has its headwaters at Buck and Hog ponds, which are separated from a smaller branch of the Middle Branch Oswegatchie by a short distance of land. Major western tributaries, including the Indian River via Black Lake, originate in areas west of the Wilderness Park and include an extended watershed covering an appreciable portion of the area west of the main stem.

Middle branch

The Middle Branch Oswegatchie River mostly consists of shallow and fast-moving waters with only two or three slow-moving sections favorable for canoeists. These include Alder Bed Flow and another still-water section known locally as Moynehan Flow. The latter begins in the area where Lower South Pond Outlet runs into the river. Occasionally, experienced kayakers take advantage of high water conditions to ply its waters – generally from the Bear Pond Road, a few miles upstream of Alder Bed Flow, and downstream to another seasonal access road located near Mullins Flow. However, because they are seasonal roads and the area is so remote – this part of the river is seldom used. Brook trout exist as the primary sport-fish for the entire length of Middle Branch Oswegatchie. Chubs & bullheads are also present in its waters.

West branch

The West Branch Oswegatchie River is slower-moving than the Middle Branch. But the still waters such as Long Pond, Mud Pond and Long Level, are separated by hard-to-traverse rapids and/or waterfalls. The Branch's far-upstream sections consist of small and narrow feeder streams, which are generally not favorable to canoeists due to fallen logs and overhanging alders. During the Great Depression, New York State purchased deeded fishing rights for the public on most of the river.[citation needed] The Civilian Conservation Corps created a public trail from where the outlet of Mud Pond crosses the Long Pond Road, downstream to the Jerden Falls Road.[citation needed] Today, no sign of the trail has survived, but the deeded fishing rights for the public remain, despite new landowners in some locations. Brook trout are the main sport-fish. Shiners, sunfish, suckers, chubs, minnows, bullheads and other fish may also be found in its waters.

Confluence

The Middle Branch Oswegatchie River unites with the West Branch Oswegatchie River near the village of Harrisville, in Lewis County. The river continues downstream as the West Branch Oswegatchie River, until it unites with the Oswegatchie River at a point a short distance west of the village of Talcville. From that point, it is known as "the Oswegatchie," as it flows northerly to its terminus with the St. Lawrence River near Ogdensburg, New York. The last major tributary to the system is flow from the Indian River system after Black Lake. The lower part of the main stem of the river, between Gouverneur and Ogdensburg, is slow-moving, with some rapids that can be handled by experienced canoeists. Important fish species include smallmouth bass, northern pike, musky, channel catfish, walleyes, red-finned mullet, and common carp.

Tributaries

Right

Glasby Creek
Skate Creek
Tooley Pond Outlet
Skate Creek
Welch Creek
Stammer Creek
Robinson Creek
White Creek
Indian Creek
Anderson Creek
Indian Creek
Lisbon Creek

Left

Robinson River
Wolf Pond Outlet
Buck Brook
Peavine Creek
Thomas Brook
Little River
West Branch Oswegatchie River
Turnpike Creek
Matoon Creek
Malterna Creek
Vrooman Creek
Bonney Creek
Beaver Creek
Black Lake

The middle section of the Oswegatchie, and the East Branch Oswegatchie between Gouverneur (village) and Cranberry Lake, are partially navigable by experienced canoeists. A two-mile section from southern Cranberry Lake to Inlet is unnavigable. From Inlet, the upper Oswegatchie is one of the wildest canoeable rivers in the Adirondacks.[4]

The area is rich in history from logging days to the present. The upper river provides access to some of the most remote parts of Adirondack Park. Near the southern edge of St. Lawrence County, it goes over High Falls on the Oswegatchie River. There is a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) portage at the old historic "Beaverdam" by which canoeists can hike to continue their paddling at Lows Lake and the Bog River. These are all located in the Five Ponds Wilderness Area.

See also

References

  1. ^ "The National Map". U.S. Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 2012-04-05. Retrieved Feb 11, 2011.
  2. ^ Simms, Jeptha Root, Trappers of New York, p. 249, Harrison, NY: Harbor Hill Books, 1850, 1871, reprinted 1980, ISBN 0-916346-38-2
  3. ^ Bright, William (2004). Native American placenames of the United States. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 359. ISBN 978-0-8061-3598-4. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
  4. ^ Jamieson, Paul F., and Donald Morris, Adirondack Canoe Waters: North Flow, 3rd ed., Adirondack Mountain Club, Lake George, NY, 1988, rev. 1994, ISBN 978-0-935272-43-7