Onondaga Hollow, New York Explained
Onondaga Hollow, also known as Onondaga Valley,[1] was a village in Onondaga County, New York,[2] from 1784 to 1926.[3] [4] It was the first county seat, and one of the most prominent settlements in the early years of white inhabitation in the region.[5] The village was annexed into the city of Syracuse, New York, in 1926, and today makes up the southernmost portion (North Valley and South Valley).[6]
Notes and References
- Book: Bruce, Dwight Hall . Onondaga's Centennial: Gleanings of a Century . 1896 . Boston History Company . 108 . en.
- Book: Clayton, W. Woodford . History of Onondaga County, New York . 1878 . D. Mason & Company . 277 . en.
- Web site: Blalock . Ellen M. . 2016-02-28 . Onondaga County centuries old buildings still in use for their original purpose . 2023-11-21 . syracuse . en.
- News: 1939-03-20 . Syracuse, Started as 250-Acre Tract, Grew By Mergers . 150 . Syracuse Herald-Journal . 2023-11-21 . Newspapers.com.
- Book: Shaw, Diane . City Building on the Eastern Frontier: Sorting the New Nineteenth-Century City . 2020 . JHU Press . 978-1-4214-2931-1 . 19, 49-51 . en.
- Book: Eisenstadt, Peter . The Encyclopedia of New York State . 2005-05-19 . Syracuse University Press . 978-0-8156-0808-0 . 1517 . en . Syracuse.