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Glens Falls, New York
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Glens Falls |
| settlement_type | City |
| nicknames | Hometown U.S.A., Empire City |
| image_skyline | Downtown Glens Falls New York roundabout.jpg |
| imagesize | 250px |
| image_caption | Centennial Circle, a five-leg roundabout in downtown Glens Falls, June 2009 |
| image_map | Glens Falls New York.PNG |
| mapsize | 250px |
| map_caption | Location of Glens Falls in Warren County |
| pushpin_map | USA New York#USA |
| pushpin_map_caption | Location in New York (state)##Location within the United States |
| pushpin_label | Glens Falls |
| pushpin_relief | yes |
| subdivision_type | Country |
| subdivision_name | United States |
| subdivision_type1 | State |
| subdivision_name1 | New York |
| subdivision_type2 | County |
| subdivision_name2 | Warren |
| government_type | Mayor-Council |
| leader_title | Mayor |
| leader_name | S. William Collins (D) |
| leader_title1 | Common Council |
| leader_name2 | {{Collapsible list |
| title | Members' List |
| frame_style | border:none; padding: 0; |
| title_style | |
| list_style | text-align:left;display:none; |
| 1 | • At-Large Member: Jane Reid (D) |
| 2 | • W1: Jim Campinell (D) |
| 3 | • W2: William Collins (D) |
| 4 | • W3: Diana Palmer (D) |
| 5 | • W4: Scott Endieveri (D) |
| 6 | • W5: Jim Clark Jr. (D) |
| established_title | Incorporated |
| established_date | 1839 (village) |
| 1908 (city) | |
| area_total_km2 | 10.33 |
| area_total_sq_mi | 3.99 |
| area_land_km2 | 9.97 |
| area_land_sq_mi | 3.85 |
| area_water_km2 | 0.36 |
| area_water_sq_mi | 0.14 |
| area_water_percent | 2.54 |
| area_urban_km2 | 91.55 |
| area_footnotes | |
| area_urban_sq_mi | 35.35 |
| population_as_of | 2020 |
| population_total | 14830 |
| population_density_km2 | 1486.92 |
| population_density_sq_mi | 3850.95 |
| population_metro | 128,774 |
| timezone | EST |
| utc_offset | −5 |
| timezone_DST | EDT |
| utc_offset_DST | −4 |
| coordinates | |
| elevation_m | 105 |
| elevation_ft | 344 |
| website | |
| postal_code_type | ZIP codes |
| postal_code | 12801 |
| area_codes | 518, 838 |
| blank_name | FIPS code |
| blank_info | 36-29333 |
| blank1_name | GNIS feature ID |
| blank1_info | 0951223 |
| unit_pref | Imperial |
1908 (city)
Glens Falls is a city in Warren County, New York, United States and is the central city of the Glens Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area. The population was 14,830 at the 2020 census. The name was given by Colonel Johannes Glen, the falls referring to a large waterfall in the Hudson River at the southern end of the city.
Glens Falls is a city in the southeastern corner of Warren County, surrounded by the town of Queensbury to the north, east, and west, and by the Hudson River and Saratoga County to the south. Glens Falls is known as "Hometown U.S.A.", a title Look magazine gave it in 1944. The city has also referred to itself as the "Empire City."
History


The area is originally called Chepontuc ("difficult place to get around") in the Iroquoian languages of the area's Indigenous inhabitants. It also referred to as the "Great Carrying Place." Later, European-American settlers named the area "The Corners" in English.
As a halfway point between Fort Edward and Fort William Henry, the falls was the site of several battles during the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War. The then-hamlet was mostly destroyed by fire twice during the latter conflict, forcing the Quakers to abandon the settlement until the war ended in 1783. Fire also ravaged the village in 1864, 1884, and 1902.
In 1766, it was renamed Wing's Falls for Abraham Wing – the leader of the group of Quakers who established the permanent settlement – and for the falls on the Hudson River. Wing's claim to the name of the falls and the hamlet was transferred to Colonel Johannes Glen of Schenectady in 1788, either on collection of a debt, as a result of a game of cards, or in exchange for hosting a party for mutual friends, depending on which local legend is believed. Colonel Glen changed the name to "Glen's Falls," though it was often printed with varying spelling such as "Glenn's," "Glenville", or "Glens". The spelling "Glens Falls" came to be the common usage.
A post office was established in 1808. Glens Falls became an incorporated village in 1839, and was re-incorporated in 1874 and 1887, expanding the village to what would become the city limits when the state legislature granted the city charter in 1908, at which time the city became independent from the town of Queensbury.
In 2003, with permission from Queensbury, Glens Falls annexed approximately 49 acre of the town. The land, known as Veterans Field or the Northway Industrial Park, is on Veterans Road between Luzerne Road and Sherman Avenue and is just east of I-87. The land was vacant at the time. A thin, 0.5 mi strip of Sherman Avenue was part of this annexation, to comply with state law on contiguity of annexed land. As a result, the city and town share this stretch of highway.
Geography
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has an area of 3.9 sqmi, of which 3.8 sqmi is land and 0.1 sqmi (2.54%) is water.
The city is on the Hudson River, in the Adirondack foothills, at the border of Saratoga County.
Climate
|Jan record high F = 66 |Feb record high F = 70 |Mar record high F = 86 |Apr record high F = 92 |May record high F = 98 |Jun record high F = 98 |Jul record high F = 101 |Aug record high F = 101 |Sep record high F = 97 |Oct record high F = 87 |Nov record high F = 78 |Dec record high F = 69 |Jan avg record high F = 51.3 |Feb avg record high F = 50.9 |Mar avg record high F = 63.9 |Apr avg record high F = 78.1 |May avg record high F = 87.0 |Jun avg record high F = 90.4 |Jul avg record high F = 91.1 |Aug avg record high F = 89.3 |Sep avg record high F = 85.6 |Oct avg record high F = 76.0 |Nov avg record high F = 65.7 |Dec avg record high F = 53.6 |year avg record high F = 92.9 |Jan avg record low F = -15.8 |Feb avg record low F = -13.1 |Mar avg record low F = -0.1 |Apr avg record low F = 19.3 |May avg record low F = 29.9 |Jun avg record low F = 39.4 |Jul avg record low F = 47.5 |Aug avg record low F = 44.2 |Sep avg record low F = 32.6 |Oct avg record low F = 22.8 |Nov avg record low F = 11.8 |Dec avg record low F = -3.6 |year avg record low F = -19.6 |Jan record low F = −36 |Feb record low F = −32 |Mar record low F = −24 |Apr record low F = 3 |May record low F = 20 |Jun record low F = 32 |Jul record low F = 32 |Aug record low F = 31 |Sep record low F = 24 |Oct record low F = 15 |Nov record low F = −7 |Dec record low F = −34 |access-date = 2019-05-29 |access-date = August 24, 2024 |archive-date = August 24, 2024 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20240824052804/https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/services/data/v1?dataset=normals-monthly-1991-2020&stations=USW00014750&format=pdf&dataTypes=MLY-TMAX-NORMAL,MLY-TMIN-NORMAL,MLY-TAVG-NORMAL,MLY-PRCP-NORMAL,MLY-SNOW-NORMAL |url-status = live}}
Demographics
As of the census of 2010, there were 14,707 people, 6,548 households, and 3,529 families residing in the city. The population density was 3685.97 PD/sqmi. There were 7,112 housing units at an average density of 1782.46 /sqmi. The racial makeup of the city was 94.7% White, 1.8% African American, 0.3% Native American, 0.6% Asian, 0.4% from other races, and 2.3% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 2.3% of the population.
There were 6,548 households, out of which 26.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 34.0% were married couples living together, 14.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 46.1% were non-families. 36.2% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.22 and the average family size was 2.91.
In the city, the population was spread out, with 24.3% under the age of 20, 6.8% from 20 to 24, 29.5% from 25 to 44, 27.1% from 45 to 64, and 12.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37.6 years. For every 100 females, there were 94.3 males. For every 100 females age 20 and over, there were 90.9 males.
The median income for a household in the city was estimated for 2016 at $46,305, and the median income for a family at $60,545. Males had a median income of $41,993 versus $37,988 for females. About 12.6% of families and 16% of the population were below the poverty line, including 23.9% of those under age 18 and 8% of those age 65 or over.
Economy

The Glens Falls region is a major producer of medical devices. Glens Falls is home to Navilyst Medical, a medical device maker, previously a regional office of Pfizer and Boston Scientific Corporation. Glens Falls is also a principal provider of medical services for a vast 2600 sqmi region from Saratoga County to the south, extending northward to the central Adirondacks. These services are centered around the Glens Falls Hospital, a 410-bed facility downtown. Founded in the summer of 1897 by a group of twelve local physicians, the Glens Falls Hospital was meant to serve the entire Upper Hudson River Valley. Solomon A. Parks donated his home in Glens Falls for the original hospital. The present structure has been extensively modified, enlarged, and modernized several times to better serve the needs of the community, and it is the region's fast-response trauma center. The hospital is now the area's biggest employer. A VA outpatient facility serves veterans' medical needs.
Danfloss Flomatic Corporation is headquartered on Pruyn's Island in Glens Falls. The company is a leading manufacturer of industrial and municipal valves. Also on Pruyn's Island is Umicore, a Belgium-based company manufacturing silver-based contact materials.
Finch Paper LLC, headquartered at the base of Glen Street hill, is a major regional employer and a manufacturer of specialty paper and forest products. It is by far the largest taxpayer in the City of Glens Falls, owning property assessed at $60-million in 2006, according to city records. In mid-June 2007, Finch Pruyn & Company announced it had sold all of its assets, including 161000 acre of forestland in the Adirondacks, to Atlas Holdings of Greenwich, Conn. The Company name was then changed to Finch Paper LLC. Atlas then sold all of the forestland to The Nature Conservancy.
The Glens Falls Cement company, established 1893, is now a part of Lehigh Northeast, itself a division of HeidelbergCement, one of the world's largest cement producers.
Glens Falls has an old and prevalent history in the region's finance sector. Arrow Financial Corporation, headquartered downtown, is a publicly traded multi-bank holding company for Glens Falls National Bank & Trust Company (1851) and Saratoga National Bank and Trust Company. Evergreen Bank, N.A., formerly the First National Bank of Glens Falls, originated in 1853, and is now owned by banking conglomerate TD Banknorth. Advantage Capital Partners, a venture capital firm, has its New York offices downtown.
Arts and culture
Arts and theater
The 300-seat Charles R. Wood Theater is home to the Adirondack Theater Festival, a professional non-profit summer theatre.
The Wood Theater provides artistic and cultural presentations throughout the year. Opened in 2003, the theater is named for Mr. Wood, a local entrepreneur and founder of The Great Escape & Splashwater Kingdom.
The Glens Falls Community Theatre has produced theatrical productions in Glens Falls for nearly 75 years.
The Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Council promotes the arts, hosts an annual arts festival, and maintains a gallery.
The Glens Falls Symphony began as a community orchestra at Adirondack Community College, now SUNY Adirondack, in 1977, initially named the Adirondack Concert Orchestra and later becoming the Adirondack Philharmonia. In 1986, the Symphony became a fully professional orchestra, making Glens Falls one of the smallest cities in the United States with a fully professional orchestra. In 1990, the Board and musicians voted to join the national American Federation of Musicians (AFM), the professional musicians’ union.
Museums include:
- The Hyde Collection, featuring European and American art.
- The Chapman Museum, featuring local history exhibits
- The World Awareness Children's Museum is a children's museum focused on cultural diversity.
Art in the Public Eye is a local non-profit arts organization.
The Shirt Factory Arts and Healing Center is a historic shirt factory that now houses artists' studios, shops, galleries, healing arts and services. More than 50 artists and 13 shops and galleries are in this building.
The Glens Falls September 11 Memorial is a tribute to the lives lost on that day, and the first responders. The memorial consists of 12 foot, solid granite towers resembling the trade center encompassed by granite walls to resemble the Pentagon. It also incorporates a piece of steel from the World Trade Center.
Historic sites

Glens Falls has two historic districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the equivalent New York State Register of Historic places. The Fredella Avenue historic district includes a series of concrete block structures, and the Three Squares Historic District makes up most of the Central Business District.
Historic sites:
- Crandall Public Library, founded in 1893, and relocated in 1931. It was designed by Charles A. Platt. The library is a part of the Southern Adirondack Library System.
- Civil War Monument, a limestone obelisk dedicated in 1872 to honor the 644 men from Queensbury who served in the Civil War. Ninety-five names, those of the men who died, are engraved on the monument.
- Zopher Delong House, currently the location of the Chapman Historical Museum.
- Glens Falls Feeder Canal, a hydro-electric power-plant on the Hudson River at Glens Falls. The canal was created around 1820 to feed water into the Champlain Canal. During the early 19th century, the New York State Canal System was crucial to the development of the state's economy. Lime, marble, lumber, and agricultural commodities were shipped between Glens Falls and the docks at the base of Canal Street.
- First Presbyterian Church, chartered in 1803; its fifth house of worship was constructed in 1929. It was designed by Ralph Adams Cram in his "presbyterian style" of neo-gothic architecture.
- Fort Amherst Road, the site of the former Fort Amherst. The fort constituted a block house marking the halfway point on the road between Fort Edward and Fort William Henry at the head of Lake George. This fort system, erected by the British, was built to secure the colony's northern territories from French incursions during the French and Indian War.
- Louis Fiske Hyde House, designed by Robert Rheinlander and Henry Forbes Bigelow, houses The Hyde Collection, a contemporary art.
- The Oldest Building in Glens Falls, a stone and brick structure erected around 1815.
- Quaker Meeting House, built in 1875.
- St. Mary-St. Alphonsus Regional Catholic School, established as St. Mary's Academy in 1883.
- A New York State historical marker referencing American Modernist painter Wilhelmina Weber Furlong was placed near City Hall in 2013.
Regional events
Events include:
- Adirondack Balloon Festival, founded in 1973, a four-day hot air balloon festival in the Glens Falls area, with events at the Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport and Crandall Park.
- The Adirondack Stampede, a Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association charity rodeo.
- Lower Adirondack Regional Arts Council June Arts Festival, held annually since 1972.
- New York State Boys' Public High School Basketball Tournament, founded in 1981.
- The Third Thursday Glens Falls Art Walk.
Sports
Glens Falls has a tradition of minor league hockey. The highly successful Adirondack Red Wings, four-time Calder Cup champions of the American Hockey League, played in the city from 1979 to 1999. When the parent Detroit Red Wings disbanded the franchise, it was replaced by the Adirondack IceHawks of the United Hockey League, which was renamed "Frostbite" in 2004 before it folded in 2006. From 2009 to 2014, the city was the home to the AHL's Adirondack Phantoms, the principal farm team of the Philadelphia Flyers. On May 16, 2014, the Calgary Flames announced the Adirondack Flames would be their AHL affiliate. The Flames played one season before the AHL underwent a large realignment before the 2015–16 season and the Calgary Flames moved their AHL team to Stockton, California (renamed to Stockton Heat) and moved their ECHL team to Glens Falls, called the Adirondack Thunder.
Glens Falls' East Field is home to the Glens Falls Greenjackets of the Empire Football League. The Greenjackets started in 1928 and is the second oldest-active semi-pro football team in the country. The Greenjackets are 2008 & 2009 NAFL Empire Division Champions (10–0) and the 2009 NAFL North Atlantic Region Champions (14–0), and finished the season at 14–1 as the NAFL Eastern Conference Runners-up, 2009 NAFL Elite 8.
The city is also home to the Glens Falls Dragons, a baseball team playing in the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League, a collegiate summer baseball league. Since the team's inception in 2003 it has played at East Field.
Parks and recreation

City Park is located in the city's business district and contains the public library.
Crandall Park has a lowland pond, war monuments and recreation facilities bordering the city's Coles' Woods International Ski Trail system
Glens Falls Civic Center opened in 1979 and hosts sports and entertainment events in downtown Glens Falls; it includes an arena for sporting events, concerts, family activities, dance, theater and trade shows as well as banquet facilities. The Adirondack Thunder and Adirondack Junior Thunder play here. The facility was renamed Cool Insuring Arena in 2017 and Harding Mazzotti Arena in 2025. Past teams include the Adirondack Wildcats basketball team of the USBL, and the one year (1994) roller hockey franchise Empire State Cobras, as well as the ice hockey teams Adirondack Flames, Adirondack Frostbite, Adirondack Phantoms, and the Adirondack Red Wings.
East Field is home to the Glens Falls Dragons, of the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League; the Greenjackets semi-pro football team, the second oldest football team in America formed in 1928; and the Glens Falls High School Indians. It was home to the Glens Falls White Sox and Glens Falls Tigers of the Eastern League, the Glens Falls Redbirds of the New York–Penn League and the Adirondack Lumberjacks of the Northeast League/Northern League East.
Government

Glens Falls, since incorporation as a city in 1908, has had a strong mayor charter. The city's Common Council has six members; one is elected to represent the city at large while the other five are elected from wards. The city is represented on the Warren County Board of Supervisors by five supervisors; one supervisor is elected from each Common Council ward. Such "city ward supervisors" do not have any duties in city government but have all the rights and privileges as any other member of the County Board.
Departments of the City include: Cemetery, Community, Fire, Police, Public Works, Purchasing, Recreation, Controller, Assessment, Civil Service, Clerk, Water & Sewer, and Buildings and Codes.
- Charles W. Cool, 1908–09
- Samuel D. Kendrick, 1910–11
- W. Irving Griffing, 1912–15 and 1920–21
- Edward Reed, 1916–20 (died in office)
- Julius Jacobson, 1920 (interim)
- Charles W. Cool, 1922–23
- Charles H. Hitchcock, 1924–25
- Orville C. Smith, 1926–31
- Earle H. Stickney, 1932–33 and 1936–39
- W. Irving Griffing, 1934–35
- John Bazinet, 1940–49
- Milton G. Tibbitts 1950–51 and 1954–57
- J. Ward Russell, 1952–53 and 1958–61
- Harry Helm, 1962–63
- James E. Wallace, 1964–65
- James J. Donnelly, 1966–69
- Robert J. Cronin, 1970–77
- Edward M. Bartholomew, 1978–85
- Francis X. O'Keefe, 1986–93
- Vincent J. DeSantis, 1994–97
- Robert A. Regan, 1998–2005
- LeRoy B. Akins Jr, 2006–2008 (died in office)
- John "Jack" Diamond, May 10, 2008–2017 (Acting Mayor until election; elected Mayor November 4, 2008 for final year of term of Mayor Akins; reelected 2009 for a full term)
- Daniel L. Hall, 2018-present
Education
The city falls within two school districts, both of which are independent of the city government. The majority of the city falls within the Glens Falls City School District, which includes parts of the town of Queensbury.
The Glens Falls City School District operates Glens Falls High School, a middle school and four neighborhood elementary schools (Sanford Street School, Big Cross School, Jackson Heights School and Kensington Road Elementary School). Sanford Street School was closed at the end of the 2010–2011 school year.
The Glens Falls Common School District operates an independent public elementary school, Abraham Wing Elementary School, named for a founder of Glens Falls. Saint Mary's–Saint Alphonsus Regional Catholic School serves children in pre-kindergarten through grade eight as a regional parochial school.
Media
The Post-Star is a daily newspaper printed in Glens Falls with a daily circulation of approximately 27,000. The paper covers Glens Falls and Saratoga as well as the surrounding towns and counties of Warren, Saratoga and Washington. Established in 1895, it has been published since 1909. Writer Mark Mahoney won the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in Journalism (Editorial Writing) for his editorials on local government secrecy.
The Chronicle is a free weekly newspaper with a summer distribution up to 37,000. It was founded in 1980.
Radio
AM
- WMML/1230
- WWSC/1450
FM
- WLJH/90.7
- WGFR/92.7
- WBLN-LP/104.9
Television
Glens Falls is part of the Albany/Schenectady/Troy television market. One low-powered station originates from Glens Falls, WNCE-CD (TV-31).
Infrastructure
Transportation
Air
Floyd Bennett Memorial Airport is public-use airport northeast of the city.
Bus
Capital District Transportation Authority provides bus service for the city and surrounding communities.
Roads
- U.S. Route 9 – known as Glen Street throughout Glens Falls.
- New York Route 32
- New York Route 9L
Glens Falls has a radial street pattern originating from its colonial settlement.
Notable people==
- George S. Brown (1801–1886) – first African American pastor in the former Troy Annual Conference
- Joseph Bruno – former Majority Leader of New York State Senate; born in Glens Falls
- George H. Chase (1843–1918) - Member of the 1st Arizona State Legislature.
- Bradshaw Crandell - illustrator and Hollywood portrait artist; born in Glens Falls
- Douglass Crockwell (1904–1968) - artist and filmmaker (Glens Falls Sequence, 1946); moved to Glens Falls in 1933
- John Alden Dix – 41st governor of New York (1911–1913), born in Glens Falls
- Laura Don – born Anna Laura Fish at Glens Falls, actress-manager and playwright
- "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan – professional wrestler of Mid-South, WWF and WCW fame, Glens Falls native
- Lisa Eichhorn – actress, born in Glens Falls
- Warren Angus Ferris (1810–1873) – explorer of the American West and early surveyor of Dallas
- George Fitch – member of the Wisconsin State Senate
- Jimmer Fredette – former combo guard for Brigham Young University's basketball team and consensus 2011 college player of the year; Glens Falls native
- Joseph Girard III – college basketball player for Clemson University
- Ferris Greenslet – editor of the Atlantic Monthly (1902–07), born in Glens Falls
- Carlyle Harris – convicted murderer; executed in 1893 for poisoning his wife
- Lionel Hitchman – professional hockey player, 1929 Stanley Cup champion, died in Glens Falls
- Charles Evans Hughes – Governor of New York (1907–1910), presidential candidate (1916), and Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court (1930–1941); born in Glens Falls
- Thomas M. Jacobs – Olympic Nordic skier
- Frederick Avery Johnson – Member of Congress, village president
- Dave LaPoint – retired Major League Baseball pitcher and 1982 World Series champion; owner of Dave LaPoint's Pitchers bar formerly on South Street; Glens Falls High School graduate
- Betty Little – State Senator serving 45th Senate District (includes Glens Falls); born in Glens Falls but resides in Queensbury
- Rob Loughan – entrepreneur and investor
- Peter Mahovlich – retired All-Star hockey player; was on four Stanley Cup-winning teams; member of Canada's Sports Hall of Fame; resides in Glens Falls
- Barry Melrose – former head coach of the NHL's Tampa Bay Lightning and Los Angeles Kings, television commentator, former co-owner of Adirondack Frostbite UHL team and former coach of Adirondack Red Wings AHL team, both of which were based in Glens Falls
- Lorrie Moore – O. Henry Award-winning author
- Scott Murphy – U.S. Representative (2009–2011) for New York's 20th congressional district, which includes Glens Falls; Murphy also lives in Glens Falls
- Algernon Sidney Paddock – Secretary of Nebraska Territory and Governor of Nebraska; United States Senator; born in Glens Falls
- Dave Palmer – retired Major League Baseball pitcher
- Johnny Podres – pitcher for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers; retired to Glens Falls region
- Edward C. Prescott – 2004 Nobel Prize in Economics, Glens Falls High School class of 1958
- Edgar Preston Richardson – art historian and director of the Detroit Institute of Arts and Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library
- Ed Reulbach – MLB pitcher with the Chicago Cubs during the early 1900s; 1907 and 1908 World Series champion; died in Glens Falls
- Robert Rheinlander – noted architect and designer of several prominent Glens Falls buildings
- Rochelle Saidel – author, activist, and founder of the Remember the Women Institute
- Powel J. Smith – member of the New York State Assembly, City Chamberlain
- Gerald B. H. Solomon – United States Representative from New York (1979–1999)
- Kate White – former editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan Magazine; identifies Glens Falls as her hometown
In popular culture
- The 1982 film Basket Case was partially filmed in Glens Falls.
- Glens Falls and the natural formation of the bedrock beneath it served as inspiration to James Fenimore Cooper in his historical novel The Last of the Mohicans (1826).
- In The Witch of Hebron (2010) by James Howard Kunstler, several characters visit Glens Falls.
Sister cities
- Japan – Saga, Japan
References
References
- [http://www.cityofglensfalls.com Official website] {{Webarchive. link. (April 15, 2004 , cityofglensfalls.com; accessed February 16, 2018.)
- "ArcGIS REST Services Directory". United States Census Bureau.
- "Metropolitan Areas and Components, 1999, with FIPS Codes". US Census Bureau.
- "American FactFinder: 2010 Demographic Profile Data – ZCTA5 12801". [[United States Census Bureau]].
- Glens Falls Historical Association. (1978). "Bridging The Years: Glens Falls, New York 1763–1978". Glens Falls Historical Association.
- "History of Warren County, H. P. Smith – Chapter XXV: History of the Patent and Town of Queensbury – Part 2". Ancestry.com.
- "Towns and Cities of the Southern Adirondacks: City of Glens Falls, Warren County". Adirondack Regional Chamber of Commerce.
- Map of the Hudson River, Showing Glenville, NY. David Rumsey Map Collection. Accessed May 16, 2025. https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~237245~5511082?qvq=w4s%3A%2Fwhere%2FHudson%2BRiver%3Bq%3Aalbany%3Blc%3ARUMSEY~8~1&mi=53&trs=54#.
- (January 8, 2004). "Time Line". Chapman Historical Museum Education Department.
- Randall, Thom. (2003-05-21). "Town to cede industrial park". The Post-Star.
- "Overview of 2003 Annexation".
- Gereau, John. (2002-04-04). "City, town to share Sherman Avenue strip". The Post-Star.
- Thompson, Maury. (2003-10-26). "Glens Falls Common Council". The Post-Star.
- "Glens Falls, New York (NY 12801, 12804) profile: population, maps, real estate, averages, homes, statistics, relocation, travel, jobs, hospitals, schools, crime, moving, houses, news, sex offenders".
- (February 8, 2006). "Decennials - Census of Population and Housing".
- (2008-08-04). "Medical device maker gets new name". [[The Post-Star]].
- Judd, Erin. (2008-03-04). "Avista takes on state as partner in new medical device company". [[The Post-Star]].
- "GFH Fast Facts". Glens Falls Hospital.
- "Hospital History". Glens Falls Hospital.
- "Adirondack Regional Chambers of Commerce: Top 25 Employers in the Glens Falls Region".
- "Glens Falls VA Outpatient Clinic - Location home page".
- Judd, Erin. (2008-04-27). "Expanding on expansion". [[the Post-Star]].
- (December 9, 1903). "Cement Works to Suspend Operations". [[The New York Times]].
- "Advantage Capital Partners website".
- "New & Contemporary Theater Including Plays, Musicals, Comedies & Shows In Glens Falls NY Near Lake George NY".
- "Glens Falls Community Theaters: About Us".
- "LARAC".
- "About The Symphony".
- "Glens Falls Symphony Orchestra".
- "About - Art in the Public Eye".
- "Home".
- "NEW YORK – Warren County – Historic Districts".
- "Crandall Library History".
- "Expansion project details".
- "History Projects". Dr. Marilyn VanDyke, Historian, Town of Queensbury.
- [https://www.fpcgf.org First Presbyterian Churchm Glens Falls] {{Webarchive. link. (February 1, 2007 , fpcgf.org; accessed May 21, 2017.)
- (September 5, 2024). "St. Mary's Academy is Back!".
- "Weber Furlong and the Origins of Modern Art October 6, 2013". The Hyde Collection Glens Falls NY.
- "Weber Furlong Historic marker dedication". Time Warner Cable Albany NY.
- "ADIRONDACK BALLOON FESTIVAL".
- "LARAC".
- [http://www.poststar.com/articles/2007/06/06/news/latest/doc4666fe245e70a071476528.txt LARAC festival returning to City Park], ''The Post-Star'', June 6, 2007
- [http://www.nysbasketball.net/nysphsaa/NYSPHSAA-home.htm] {{Webarchive. link. (March 18, 2014, ''NYSPHSAA'', January 27, 2011)
- "Third Thursday Glens Falls Art Walk".
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