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Lisha Kill, New York

Lisha Kill
Lisha's Kill
hamlet
Official name: Lisha Kill, New York
Name origin: from creek of same name and name of a local Native American who is buried along its banks
Country United States
State New York
Region Capital District
County Albany
Municipality Town of Colonie
Landmark John V. A. Lansing Farmhouse
River Lisha Kill
Coordinates 42°45′25″N 73°52′45″W / 42.75694°N 73.87917°W / 42.75694; -73.87917Coordinates: 42°45′25″N 73°52′45″W / 42.75694°N 73.87917°W / 42.75694; -73.87917
Settled 1790s
Timezone EST (UTC-5)
 - summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP Code 12304
Area code 518
Location of Lisha Kill within the state of New York

Lisha Kill is a hamlet in the town of Colonie, Albany County, New York. Lisha Kill lies on New York Route 5 (Central Avenue) in the western section of the town. The hamlet received its name from the creek of the same name, Lisha Kill, kill being Dutch for creek or stream. The stream is also referred to as Lisha's Kill and received its name from a local legend about a Native American woman who is buried along its banks.

Lisha Kill's history is intimately tied to the creek of the same name. Originally called Lysiens Kill, local legend says Lisha's Kill is named for a Native American woman who was buried along its banks. Some of the earliest settlers were of the Lansing family, a family long associated with nearby Albany, Cohoes, and Lansingburgh; Jacob Lansing is considered the first to have settled in the area and John V.A. Lansing, another early settler, arrived in 1792. His house still stands and has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1985. Henry O. Lansing owned a saw mill powered by water or steam from the Lisha Kill in 1875. Several Lansings in the late 19th century were deacons, elders, and officers of the (Dutch) Reformed Church of Lisha's Kill.Colonel Jon T. A. Lansing and his four sons owned four farms consisting of 160 acres (0.65 km2) bounded by Central Avenue, and Lisha Kill, Lansing and Consaul roads, the Town of Colonie Golf Course is built on over half of this acreage.

The Albany and Schenectady Turnpike, built in 1799, connecting those two cities ran through the middle of Lisha Kill and had a toll-gate here. The hamlet quickly became thickly settled and well developed in the 19th century. There was a black smith, hotel, stores, a tavern run by Josiah Stanford (father of California Governor Leland Stanford); and a post office that was established in 1830. Two school houses served the local children, Watervliet School House (WSH) 7 (to the east on Consaul Road); and WSH 8 (in Stanford Heights). Today the children of Lisha Kill attend Veeder Elementary School and Lisha Kill Middle School (since 1959) east of the hamlet and then Colonie High as part of the South Colonie Central School District.


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