; from top:
ice houses on the
Hudson River; ice
barges being towed to New York; barges being unloaded; ocean
steamship being supplied; ice being weighed; small customers being sold ice; the "
uptown trade" to wealthier customers; an ice cellar being filled; by F. Ray, ''
Harper's Weekly'', 30 August 1884 When John J. Felter, John G. Perry, and Edward Felter started selling ice taken from the Hudson Lake and sold it in New York City, it became so profitable that the group created a company called Barmore, Felter, and Company. The success of this company prompted other ice businesses to come together in order to compete and these formed the Knickerbocker Ice Company. The
Ice trade company, was founded in 1831 on the eastern bank of
Rockland Lake in the hamlets of
Congers and
Valley Cottage in
Rockland County, New York. It rapidly became a commercial success because it was the cleanest and purest ice of the
Hudson River Valley region.
Icehouses could be found along the
Hudson River and on lakes from the
Catskills to
Albany making the Hudson River Valley the largest producer of ice in the area. Aware of the purity of the ice, numerous companies purchased land around Rockland Lake hoping to gain complete control of the lake. In 1855, the Knickerbocker Ice Company was incorporated from the consolidation of the surrounding companies, which each brought valuable techniques to improve the
harvesting of ice. When the gravity rail was built in 1856 and purchased its former rival, the Washington Ice Company, as a tow company in 1869 then purchased the entire company for the then astronomical sum of $1.1 million.
Facilities During this time, the company owned dozens of
steamboats, 75 ice barges, and employed 3,000 workers, which was economically important because the ice industry opened up more jobs for the hundreds and thousands of people who were looking to find work in the booming industries that resulted from the
Industrial Revolution. It is estimated
New York City consumed 285,000 tons of ice per year, most of it purchased from Rockland Lake, resulting in the nickname the “Icehouse of New York City”. Not only did the Knickerbocker Ice Company own ice houses on Rockland Lake, its success as a company and diverse means of transportation allowed it to purchase more houses along the Hudson River to expand its empire. With the invention of artificial ice, the Knickerbocker Ice Company was on the decline by 1900. It closed to the public in 1924. ==Early growth==