Rensselaer County, New York Genealogy

United States New York  Rensselaer

Rensselaer County was organised from Albany County in 1791. Greatest length 30 miles, breadth 22 miles. The county is centrally distant 156 miles north of New York, and from 10 miles east of Albany.

The county had partial settlements at a very early period of [early American] history, and has long sustained a very considerable population. The whole of the county, except the towns of Schaghticoke, Pittstown, Hoosick, and north part of Lansingburg and part of Troy, is comprised within the Rensselaerwyck patent, leased under the ordinary rent, in farms, at ten bushels of wheat the hundred acres. The county contains 13 towns and the city of Troy.

Cities
Rensselaer | Troy

Towns
Berlin | Brunswick | East Greenbush | Grafton | Hoosick | Nassau | North Greenbush | Petersburgh | Pittstown | Poestenkill | Sand Lake | Schaghticoke | Schodack | Stephentown

Cemeteries
The Rensselaer County Cemetery Name Extraction Project directed by Don and Clare Radz started in 1991. Data from headstones throughout the county was collected by volunteers. More than 600 cemeteries in 14 towns of rural Rensselaer County were surveyed, resulting in 93,274 names being recorded. Data was entered into a computer then compiled into books for each town. The records are online at Rensselaer County Cemetery Database. The cities of Troy and Rensselaer are not included in this database.

The Albany New York Family History Center has copies of the Rensselaer County rural cemetery records on microfilm.

Microfilms of rural cemetery records include the name (in alphabetical order by cemetery), location of grave, date of birth, date of death, and age at death.

Migration
Early migration routes to and from Rensselaer County for European settlers included:


 * Hudson River pre-historic
 * Lake Champlain pre-historic
 * Champlain Canal 1823
 * Erie Canal 1825
 * Chambly Canal 1843
 * Richelieu River pre-historic
 * Saint Lawrence River prehistoric
 * Lake Champlain Trail pre-historic
 * Hudson River Path
 * Mohawk or Iroquois Trail
 * Forbidden Path or Catskill Turnpike
 * Greenwood Road
 * Old Connecticut Path

Civil War
Civil War service men from Rensselaer County served in various regiments. Men often joined a company (within a regiment) that originated in their county. Listed below are companies that were formed in Rensselaer County:


 * 2nd Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 3rd Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 7th Veterans Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 10th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 22nd Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 30th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 62nd Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 65th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 91st Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 93rd Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 104th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 125th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 156th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 169th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 175th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 177th Regiment, New York Infantry
 * 192nd Regiment, New York Infantry

Newspapers

 * Newspaperarchive.com ($) has historical newspapers available on-line. Their database has North Adams, MA newspapers (1895-1977) covering local news that included Windham County residents.

Probate

 * Abstracts Of Wills, Rensselaer County, New York (1790-1850)

Vital Records

 * Index to Marriage Records, Rensselaer County, NY 1908-1935, provided by the Troy Irish Genealogy Society

Cities, Towns, Villages, Hamlets, Communities

 * Cities: Rensselaer . Troy
 * Villages: Castleton-on-Hudson (Castleton) . East Nassau . Hoosick Falls . Nassau . Schaghticoke . Valley Falls
 * Towns: Berlin . Brunswick . East Greenbush . Grafton . Hoosick . Nassau . North Greenbush . Petersburgh . Pittstown . Poestenkill . Sand Lake . Schaghticoke . Schodack . Stephentown
 * Hamlets: Cherry Plain . Cropseyville . Defreestville . East Schodack
 * Communities: Averill Park . East Greenbush . Hampton Manor . Hoag's Corner . Poestenkill . West Sand Lake . Wynantskill

Web Sites

 * catalog for Rensselaer County
 * The Rensselaer County NYGenWeb Project, an member of The NYGenWeb Project, an affiliate of The USGenWeb Project.