On Bridge Street (New York State Route 297) 0.1 miles south of State Fair Boulevard, on the left when traveling north.
Like the Solvay Process Company, the story of Crucible Industries began with two brothers across the Atlantic Ocean. The Sanderson Brothers Steel Company had produced steel in England since 1776. Looking to expand into the American market, they . . . — — Map (db m176180) HM
On Bridge Street (Route 297) 0.1 miles north of Milton Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Turk's Island & Western
Coarse Salt companies est.
here by Erie Canal ca. 1850.
Major industry in Solvay
includes Solvay Process Co. — — Map (db m175963) HM
On Bridge Street (New York State Route 297) 0.1 miles north of Milton Avenue, on the left when traveling north.
The Erie Canal made New York “The Empire State.” It transformed lives by speeding up travel, opening markets, lowering shipping costs, growing towns, and moving goods and information, connecting the young American
nation like never before. It was . . . — — Map (db m176065) HM
On Bridge Street (New York State Route 297) 0.1 miles south of State Fair Boulevard, on the left when traveling north.
The Great New York State Fair was first held in Syracuse in 1841, in and around the old courthouse on North Salina Street, near Division Street. The Fair was the creation of the New York State Agricultural Society, a group of private individuals . . . — — Map (db m176079) HM
On Milton Avenue west of Lamont Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
The Village of Solvay bears the name of two brothers Enrst and Alfred Solvay, Belgian chemists who perfected the synthetic process
for manufacturing soda ash, an essential ingredient for a host of other products in America's industrial economy. . . . — — Map (db m176184) HM