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Elbridge (town), New York

Elbridge
Town
Country United States
State New York
County Onondaga
Coordinates 43°2′12″N 76°26′36″W / 43.03667°N 76.44333°W / 43.03667; -76.44333Coordinates: 43°2′12″N 76°26′36″W / 43.03667°N 76.44333°W / 43.03667; -76.44333
Area 38.3 sq mi (99.2 km2)
 - land 37.6 sq mi (97 km2)
 - water 0.7 sq mi (2 km2), 1.83%
Population 5,922 (2010)
Density 154.6/sq mi (59.7/km2)
Territorial Subdivision 1829
Town Supervisor Kenneth L. Bush, Jr. (R)
 - Town Council
Timezone EST (UTC-5)
 - summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Postal code 13060 or 13080
Area code 315
Onondaga County New York incorporated and unincorporated areas Elbridge highlighted.svg
Location in Onondaga County and the state of New York.
Website: TownOfElbridge.com

Elbridge is a town in Onondaga County, New York, United States. The population was 5,922 at the 2010 census. The town is named after Elbridge Gerry, the fifth Vice President of the United States, and one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.

The Town of Elbridge is west of Syracuse, on the west border of the county. The town contains a village which is also named Elbridge.

Elbridge was part of Military Township No. 5 (Camillus) created following the American Revolution and given to veterans in lieu of payment for service during the War for Independence. This tract comprised most of present-day Camillus and all of Van Buren and Marcellus in what is now the County of Onondaga in Central New York's Finger Lake's Region. The Town of Elbridge was formed in 1829 from the Town of Camillus.

The Town of Elbridge includes two incorporated villages: the Village of Elbridge (incorporated in 1848) and the Village of Jordan (incorporated in 1835).

An 1896 article from Onondaga's Centennial by Dwight H. Bruce describes the area as "a densely wooded wilderness, frequented by Indians and inhabited by bears, wolves and other beasts of the forest and could not have presented an appearance other than of gloomy waste." It can be assumed that neither the Natives nor the incoming settlers necessarily agreed with Bruce's negative assessment. Before the arrival of the white settlers, the native presence was pervasive and sustained. The Onondaga ("People of the Hill") of the Iroquois Nation had several fortified settlements in the area. The largest still exists on the Seneca River in what is now known as Jack's Reef. In fact, according to some legends, Cross Lake, which forms the northern boundary of the town, was the home of the historical Hiawatha.

In 1791, government surveyor Josiah Buck arrived to map the area. Two years later he returned with his family to become the first Anglo-European settler. Buck was followed in short order by Captain William Stevens, his wife and six children. Town historians believe it is probable that Captain Stevens named the town after Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry, who participated with Stevens in the Boston Tea Party raid in 1773.


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