Chichester, New York

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The hamlet of Chichester, New York, formerly referred to as Chichesterville, is one of the the northernmost communities in the town of Shandaken, New York, being right next to the borderline between Ulster County and Greene County.

The hamlet of Chichester, New York, is not to be confused with the small city in West Sussex, England, United Kingdom. One difference is that unlike the city of Chichester, England, the "i" in Chichester, New York, is pronounced "eye" instead of "ǐ" (such as in the word "chip").

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[edit] History

A view of Chichester from the Chichester Train Station in 1905. The furniture factory is in the background.
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A view of Chichester from the Chichester Train Station in 1905. The furniture factory is in the background.

The hamlet was founded in 1863, by brothers Frank and Lemuel Chichester, whom the town is named after. They were looking for a good location to construct a furniture factory. When they found the right place, the workers at the factory began moving in the area surrounding the factory, therefore founding the company-owned Hamlet of Chichester. The narrow gauge Stony Clove and Catskill Mountain Railroad (which would later become a branch of the Ulster and Delaware Railroad) was built through the town in 1881.

The factory was later purchased by William O. Schwartzwaelder, who was of German ancestry, and renamed the factory after him. The rest of the hamlet was starting to expand, all of the houses and buildings being built by the factory, as were the other buildings. There was one general store in the town, and sold such merchandise as saddles, animal feed, and hardware. There was also a post office and a schoolhouse in the town, the schoolhouse being a house at present.

The furniture factory went out of business decades later in 1939, a few years after the great depression, which devastated the business. The rest of the hamlet no longer had an owner, and would be doomed if it didn't find another. The village, at the time comprising 44 houses and buildings, was put up for auction on October 28, 1939. Joseph Day was the auctioneer. The hamlet was purchased at the auction, and it has been in the hands of private owners ever since the auction.

[edit] Geography

Chichester is within the Catskill State Park, and is situated in a mountainous valley. The northern portion of the hamlet borders Greene County, New York, directly south of the hamlet of Lanesville, New York.

There are two major creeks that run through the hamlet. These are the Stony Clove Creek, which starts at Notch Lake in Edgewood, New York, and Warner's Creek, which also starts in Edgewood.

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