(1802) In 1709, over 50
German Palatines settled along the north side of the creek near the Hudson, with the encouragement of
Queen Anne. They were the first inhabitants of what later became Newburgh, and as a reward for making it productive, every man, woman and child among them was later granted each by the British crown. No trace of this settlement survives today. As the settlement grew into the city, and other towns were established nearby, both before and after
American independence, the creek proved to be very useful first for
millers and later to the developing
factories. Development continued far upstream. At today's Algonquin Park, a large
gunpowder mill complex, claimed at the time to be the largest in the country, was built. It is today recognized as the
Orange Mill Historic District, and some of the stone buildings are still standing. In 1879 a large
squatters' camp on the banks of the creek along the Newburgh-New Windsor divide caused some local concern. The men in it were alarming residents by drinking, reveling,
littering and
poaching local produce, many refusing to or unable to find work. Newburgh police kept chasing the men away only to find they had reestablished themselves on the New Windsor side, where they had no jurisdiction nor (at the time) authority to pursue. They
arrested those they could and eventually most of the group left of their own accord. The dam creating
Chadwick Lake along the creek further upstream, where water came from lands that remain rural, was built by the Chadwick family in 1926. The lake was built for recreational purposes and remained in private hands until the Town of Newburgh purchased it for use as a water supply in 1962. Throughout the rest of the century, the factories clustered along the creek in the city of Newburgh continued to freely discharge wastes into it. Nothing was done about this until 1984, when
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., sentenced to 1,500 hours of
community service with Hudson
Riverkeeper after an arrest for
heroin possession the year before, heard from the organization's founder, John Cronin, about local complaints about the pollution of Quassaick Creek. The work with Riverkeeper had led Kennedy to decide on
environmental law as a career, and he resolved to identify all the polluters along the creek and sue them. He and Cronin hiked along the lower of the creek, taking notes and photos wherever they could. They dived and swam into ponds to collect samples, exposing themselves to raw
sewage and many
toxins such as
naphthalene in the process. They
snuck onto company roofs late at night to find illegal pipes. Eventually they identified 24 different sources of pollution and sued 16 different companies under the federal
Clean Water Act, all of which
settled before trial and helped
clean up the lower Quassaick. Kennedy has since cited the experience as an
epiphany, the moment he grasped the connection between
environmentalism and his family's traditional involvement in
social justice: "The battle for the environment ... was the ultimate civil rights and human rights contest, a struggle to maintain public control over publicly owned resources against special interests that would monopolize, segregate and liquidate them for cash." Since then the creek has recovered to the extent that residents have begun planning on how it could be made accessible and used as a park. In December 2023, the organization
Riverkeeper was awarded nearly 4 million dollars in federal funding to remove Holden Dam, now failing and obsolete, from Quassaick Creek. ==See also==