Attractions
Hotels $$$
Fitness Centers
Clothing
Dance Schools
Nightclubs
Clothing for men
Inn
Resorts
Bookstores+
Restaurants $
Tours
Beauty Salons
Supermarket+
Restaurants $$
Hotels $$
High School
Employment Agencies
Bakeries
Car Dealers
Engineering
Theater
Museums and Culture
Hotels $
Martial arts
Malls & Shopping Centers
Restaurants $$$
Hospitals+
Moving Companies
Furniture
Colleges & Universities
Shoes & Handbags+
Wine & Liquor Stores
Bars & Pubs
Spas
Limousines
Jewelry Stores
Real Estate Agencies
Middle School
Languages
Travel Agencies
Jul/Aug/Sep
Teams
Training+
Apr/May/Jun
Department Stores
Lingerie & Swimwear
Sporting Goods Stores
Newspapers
Flower shops
Sporting School
Pilates & Yoga+Hudson Mohawk Industrial Gateway
The Hudson-Mohawk region all around Albany, Schenectady, and Troy was the Silicon Valley of the nineteenth century, and thus in many ways it was North America's original model for how the entrepreneurial use of cutting-edge technology can foster regional economic prosperity. The eastern terminus of the Erie Canal, finished in 1825, was here. The first railroad line designed specifically for use by steam locomotives connected Albany and Schenectady. Henry Burden, a Scottish immigrant who took over a nationally-ranked iron works in South Troy in the early 1800s, was the inventor of the "hook-head" railroad spike that is now in common usage.