Early Land Patents
The first land patents in the area were issued before permanent town settlement, setting the legal groundwork for later development in what became Colton.
St. Lawrence County | 13625
A town shaped by the Raquette River, Adirondack foothills, early mills, civic pride, and the stories kept alive along Main Street, South Colton, Stone Valley, and Sunday Rock.
A Foothills Town
Colton sits in southeastern St. Lawrence County, south of Potsdam, where the Raquette River runs north toward the St. Lawrence. Long before modern recreation maps, the river corridor tied the area to Adirondack travel, timber work, mills, dams, and the small-town institutions that still define Colton.
Timeline
The first land patents in the area were issued before permanent town settlement, setting the legal groundwork for later development in what became Colton.
Abel Brown and his son James Brown settled near what became Colton village in March 1824, close to the river and its practical power.
The town was formed from part of Parishville. It had earlier been known as Matildaville and was later named for early settler Jesse Colton Higley.
Sawmills on the Raquette River and a starch factory helped connect Colton’s farms, forests, and river power to the wider North Country economy.
Colton expanded with additional land from Parishville in 1851 and territory from Hopkinton in 1876, becoming one of the region’s largest towns by area.
Dams along the Raquette created flows and reservoirs, while Stone Valley, Higley Flow, Sunday Rock, the library, and the museum keep local history visible.
Historic Places
A Main Street civic landmark listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012, connected to the legacy of banker, public official, and philanthropist A. Barton Hepburn.
A dramatic Raquette River corridor shared by Colton and Parishville, known for trails, falls, river history, and remnants of industrial and hydroelectric activity.
A South Colton landmark interpreted through the Sunday Rock Legacy Project, which researches and celebrates local history through public programs and markers.
A historic religious property in Colton recognized on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.
Home to local collections, including photographs and postcards documenting roughly 150 years of people and places associated with Colton.
The Raquette River
The Raquette River runs through the western part of town and has long been central to Colton’s identity. Early settlers used its power for sawmills. Later dams created reservoirs and hydroelectric infrastructure. Today the same corridor draws hikers, paddlers, anglers, skiers, and visitors into the Adirondack edge of the North Country.
Higley Flow
Higley Flow, also known as Higley Falls Reservoir, is a man-made lake on the Raquette River between Colton and South Colton. Its story belongs to the larger transformation of the Raquette from a mill stream and timber corridor into a chain of hydroelectric impoundments, recreation waters, and shoreline communities.
Local accounts connect the major hydroelectric development to Bertrand H. Snell, who built the Higley Dam and Powerhouse around 1913 to harness the river’s power. The dam changed the river valley by backing water into a broad flow, covering earlier lowlands and creating new waterfront patterns for camps, boating, fishing, and later park use.
People
Recognized as the first settlers near Colton village in 1824.
An early settler whose middle name became the town’s name after the earlier Matildaville period.
Colton-born banker, public official, and philanthropist remembered locally through the Hepburn Library.
A longtime U.S. congressman associated with Colton and the North Country’s political history.
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