Home Page
Home Page Profiles Subscribe Join Our Membership or Edit your data! Lighthouse Calendar Online Store Lighthouse Digest Online Lighthouse Forums Lighthouse Explorer Database Visit Us in Wells Maine!
Free Catalog Get a Free Copy of Lighthouse Digest!

  
Help?

FAQ's  E-News

Review Your Cart

New York’s Seaway Trail Discovery Center

08/01/03 4:19 PM


Search!

Advertising
Support Our Advertisers

Harbour Lights

Maine Lighthouse Cruises

Sunbeam Fleet

New at the Depot

Home
Free Catalog
Subscriptions
Contributors
Lighthouse Database
Doomsday List
Links
Archives
How to Advertise

Harbour Lights
Jewelry
Books
Furnishings
Videos
Prints
Lefton
Clothing
Puzzles/Games
More
full list...

1-800-758-1444

Home>Digest>Archives>06/03

New York’s Seaway Trail Discovery Center

By Bill Edwards

   


You can see an enlarged version of this picture by clicking here.
>> Click to enlarge << 51Kb
The Seaway Trail Discovery Center.
Photo by: Bill Edwards

Sometimes referred to as the “Williamsburg of the North,” Sackets Harbor, New York is a quaint little town full of history. For instance, there is the Sackets Harbor Battlefield from the War of 1812. It is also home to the New York State Seaway Trail & Discovery Center. The two are housed in the Union Hotel, constructed in 1816-17, offering three floors of interactive exhibits relating to the Seaway Trail.

You can see an enlarged version of this picture by clicking here.
>> Click to enlarge << 72Kb
It’s “all hands on deck” for Mark and Leigh ...
Photo by: Bill Edwards

The Seaway Trail is a signed 454-mile motor route that parallels all of New York State’s fresh water coast, from Lake Erie, along the Niagara River, Lake Ontario and the Saint Lawrence River. It meets up with the Pennsylvania Seaway Trail at the Lake Erie Border and travels almost all the way to Ohio. The route rambles through ten counties with scores of villages and small towns offering countryside beauty and history.

You can see an enlarged version of this picture by clicking here.
>> Click to enlarge << 37Kb
Eleven-year-old Mark Edwards and seven-year-old ...
Photo by: Bill Edwards

And, of course, dozens of lighthouses!

You can see an enlarged version of this picture by clicking here.
>> Click to enlarge << 61Kb
A replica of New York’s Dunkirk Lighthouse ...
Photo by: Bill Edwards

Peggy Morgia, Director of Visitor Services: “The most interesting thing to note here is that most people that are coming from other areas of the country are absolutely astounded at the amount of lighthouses that we have along such a short stretch, never conceptualizing THAT many lights being attributed to just such a small segment of the Great Lakes and [St Lawrence] Seaway system. Most of the lighthouses ended up falling into disrepair and many where purchased by individuals who took it upon themselves to restore and maintain. Some were taken on by local historical or lighthouse societies... after they were decommissioned by the U.S. Coast Guard. The New York State Department of Parks, Historic Preservation and Recreation, which owns this building, have two of the lighthouses, Thirty Mile Point and Rock Island.”

You can see an enlarged version of this picture by clicking here.
>> Click to enlarge << 28Kb
Mark and Leigh Edwards enjoy one of the hands-on ...
Photo by: Bill Edwards

The Discovery Center has nine large rooms of exhibits with interactive displays for kids, highlighting the War of 1812 and local maritime history, INCLUDING lighthouses. There are hand-painted murals, detailed displays of the lighthouses along the Seaway Trail and a video showing all of the Trail’s lighthouses on a HDTV screen. The center also has a gift shop that is sure to please the palette of the lighthouse lover.

The Seaway Trail also offers a lighthouse tour package that would be enticing to the lighthouse enthusiast.

The Seaway Trail’s Discovery Center in Sackets Harbor is located a few minutes from Interstate 81, just southwest of Watertown, New York. For more information, 1-800-SEAWAY-T, www.SeawayTrail.com, info@SeawayTrail.com. (The NYS Seaway Trail is a nonprofit organization.) AND for more information on lighthouses along the Seaway Trail and anywhere else, go to www.LighthouseDepot.com and check out the Lighthouse Explorer Database!

This story appeared in the June 2003 edition of Lighthouse Digest Magazine. For subscription information about the print edition, click here.

All contents copyright © 1995 - 2003 by Lighthouse Digest®, Inc. No story, photograph, or any other item on this website may be reprinted or reproduced without the express permission of Lighthouse Digest. For contact information, click here.

Keepers Picks

Build your own lighthouse watch!

Lenox Crystal Lighthouse Glasses Lenox Crystal Lighthouse Glasses

Lenox Beacon of Hope Salt & Pepper Set Lenox Beacon of Hope Salt & Pepper Set

Cape Hatteras at Sunrise Print Cape Hatteras at Sunrise Print

2nd Order Fresnel Lens Boston 2nd Order Fresnel Lens Boston

Contact Us  About Us  Returns Policies  Email Policy  Privacy  Press  Copyright   FAQ's Awards

We support the efforts of The American Lighthouse Foundation. You can too!