Newtonville | |
Hamlet | |
Official name: Newtonville, New York | |
Name origin: For early settler John M. Newton | |
Country | United States |
---|---|
State | New York |
Region | Capital District |
County | Albany |
Municipality | Town of Colonie |
Elevation | 367 ft (112 m) |
Coordinates | |
Settled | 1840 |
Timezone | EST (UTC-5) |
- summer (DST) | EDT (UTC-4) |
ZIP Code | 12128 (PO Box only); home delivery by 12211 or 12110 |
Area code | 518 |
Location of Newtonville within the state of New York
|
Newtonville is a hamlet in the town of Colonie in Albany County, New York, United States. Located along U.S. Route 9, the hamlet is just south of Latham and north of Loudonville. Colonie Town Hall is located in the hamlet of Newtonville.
Contents |
Newtonville is named after John M. Newton, an early landowner,[1] it was originally called Newton Corners.[2] Mr. Newton was in the business of manufacturing bricks, ceramics, and stove linings. He built the First Baptist Church in 1852, today it is the Newtonville Post Office and is on the National Register of Historic Places.[2] The first post office at Newtonville was established in 1850 and located in the store owned by John H. Kemp.[1] On October 27, 1887 the Rev. Dr. William Arthur, father of President Chester A. Arthur, died in Newtonville.[3] During the early 1900's Newtonville was a popular place in guide books catering to touring the countryside in early automobiles, such as- Scarborough's Official Tour Book (1918), Automotive Industries (1905), Albany Guide Book (1917), Automotive Blue Book (1921), Red Book: Interstate Automobile Guide, and the A.L.A. Green Book: Official Route Book (1920). In 1906 David Jeram began the Loudonville Autobus line with an 18 passenger Knox bus traveling between Latham's Corners and Albany with a stop at Newtonville.[4] In 1987 the Buhrmaster Barn, built in the 1800's along the Mohawk River was moved to Newtonville at the site of the historical museum, the Pruyn House. In 1997 the Verdoy Schoolhouse was also moved to that location.[5]
Newtonville is centered on the intersection of Maxwell Road and US Route 9 (New Loudon Road). As a hamlet its boundaries are indeterminate. Newtonville is generally determined to extend north on Route 9 to the intersection with Old Loudon Road, where the hamlet of Latham begins and west on Maxwell Road to include sections of Old Niskayuna Road.
Interstate 87/Northway | Hamlet of Latham | |||
Interstate 87/Northway
Wolf Road Commercial District |
||||
Hamlet of Newtonville | ||||
Hamlet of Loudonville |