Syracuse went through several name changes before 1824, being first called
Salt Point (1780), then '''Webster's Landing
(1786), Bogardus Corners
(1796), Milan
(1809), South Salina
(1812), Cossits’ Corners
(1814), and Corinth''' (1817). The
U.S. Postal Service rejected the name
Corinth upon its application for a post office, stating there was already a
post office by this name in New York. The name Syracuse was chosen, after
Syracuse, Sicily, because of similarities such as a salt industry and a neighboring
village named
Salina. In 1825, the Village of Syracuse was officially incorporated. Five years later the
Erie Canal, which ran through the village, was completed. The Village of Syracuse and the Village of Salina were combined into the City of Syracuse on December 14, 1847. Harvey Baldwin was the first mayor of the new city.
Early industries Lewis Hamilton Redfield started the first weekly newspaper,
Onondaga Register which published its first issue on September 17, 1814. The opening of the Erie Canal caused a steep increase in the sale of salt, not only because of the lower cost of transportation, but because the canal led New York farms to change their production from wheat to pork and curing pork required salt. Until 1900, the bulk of the salt used in the United States came from Syracuse. As salt production climbed, the processing became increasingly mechanized and local industry became more generalized. The population grew from 250 in 1820, to 22,271 in 1850. The first
Solvay Process Company plant in the United States was erected on the southeastern shore of Onondaga lake in 1884 and the village was given the name
Solvay, New York, to commemorate its inventor,
Ernest Solvay. In 1861, he developed the
ammonia-soda process for the manufacture of soda ash (anhydrous sodium carbonate—a rare chemical called natrite, to distinguish it from natural
natron of antiquity). The process used sodium chloride, from brine wells dug in the southern end of the Tully valley, and limestone as a source of calcium carbonate. The process was an improvement on the earlier
Leblanc process. The Syracuse Solvay plant was the incubator for a large chemical industry complex owned by
Allied Signal in Syracuse. This plant, though, made Onondaga Lake the most polluted in the nation. Efforts to clean up the lake continue to this day. Since the discovery of large deposits of
trona (natural sodium carbonate) in 1938 near
Green River in
Wyoming, the
Solvay process became uneconomical. The Syracuse Solvay Process Company plant closed permanently in 1985 and no such plants now operate in North America. However, throughout the rest of the world, the Solvay process remains the main source of soda ash. The closing of the Onondaga Salt Springs Reservation in the early 1900s and the end to mining brine in the southern part of the Tully valley in the late 1900s marked the end of salt mining in the Syracuse region. However, groundwater flowing along the southeastern shore of Onondaga lake in Syracuse still allows salty water from a thousand feet below the southern Tully valley to flow by gravity, feeding salt springs around the lake where the Salina shale contains no halite beds.
Industry and education in the late 19th century The salt industry declined after the
Civil War, and a new
manufacturing industry arose in its place. Throughout the late 1800s and early 1900s numerous businesses and stores were established, including the
Franklin Automobile Company (which produced the first air-cooled engine in the world), the
Century Motor Vehicle Company and the Craftsman Workshops, the center of
Gustav Stickley's handmade furniture empire.
Syracuse University was chartered in 1870 as a Methodist-Episcopal institution. The
Geneva Medical College was founded in 1834. It is now known as
Upstate Medical University and is the most prestigious medical college in the Syracuse area. It is one of only four in the
State University of New York system and one of only five medical schools in the state north of New York City. == 20th century ==