Saint Andrew, New York


Saint Andrew is a hamlet in Orange County, in the U.S. state of New York.

History

St. Andrews was founded on land belonging to Henry Wileman's patent of 3,000 acres and took its name from the St. Andrew's Episcopal Congregation and Church which once stood nearby.
The congregation of St. Andrew's existed as early as 1733, and a log church was standing by 1775. At the beginning of the French and Indian War, an Indian massacre took place in St. Andrews, in which seventeen Indians were killed. During the Revolutionary War, a company of soldiers camped during the winter of 1782 in an area west of the village. In 1806, "several gun-barrels, and an old wrought hand-grenade, with other warlike implements" were discovered in the cellar of a brick farmhouse nearby, which had decayed due to the removal of lead from the pediment and roof for the casting of musket balls.
A post office called Saint Andrew's was established in 1830, the name changed to Saint Andrew in 1892, and the post office closed in 1903.
Official variant spellings have been "Saint Andrew's" and "Saint Andrews".