Lost Villages of Fort Drum Left Behind for War | Triple T Tales
Lost Villages of Fort Drum Left Behind for War explores one of the most forgotten chapters of North Country history. Hidden behind the boundaries of Fort Drum are former villages, schools, churches, farms, cemeteries, and communities that disappeared during the military expansion of Pine Camp during World War II.
Most people drive past Fort Drum without realizing entire communities once stood where soldiers now train. The Lost Villages of Fort Drum tell the story of families forced to leave, roads that vanished from maps, and a piece of New York history that still survives in old cemeteries, stone foundations, family records, and local memory.
•The story of Sterlingville, Woods Mills, Lewisburg, LeRaysville, and Alpina
•Forgotten history hidden inside Fort Drum's training grounds
Abandoned places and industrial ruins connected to the North Country
• The families displaced during the Pine Camp expansion of 1941
Welcome to Triple T Tales, a series exploring forgotten places, strange stories, hidden history, and bizarre truths from the North Country and beyond. Hosted by Beard Laws, these episodes dive into abandoned towns, industrial ruins, eerie backroads, and the kind of stories most people drive past without ever noticing.
In this episode, we uncover the real history behind the Lost Villages of Fort Drum. Learn how hundreds of families were displaced, why entire communities disappeared, and what remains hidden behind the fences of one of America's most important military installations. From old iron furnaces and forgotten cemeteries to family photographs and stories passed down through generations, this is a journey into a piece of New York history many people have never heard about.
Whether you love North Country history, abandoned places in New York, Adirondack stories, ghost towns, military history, or strange discoveries found on old maps, this episode offers a fascinating look into a forgotten world that once existed just beyond the roads we travel today.
Timestamps:
00:00 - Introduction: The story of North Country villages erased for Fort Drum expansion
00:29 - How and why villages like Sterlingville and Woods Mills were displaced
00:57 - The strategic move to expand Pine Camp into Fort Drum before WWII
01:23 - The history and resilience of early North Country communities
02:23 - Displacement of 525 families and their homes in the 1940s
02:53 - The emotional cost of eminent domain and community loss
03:15 - The transformation of Pine Camp into Fort Drum and military training history
04:12 - The rugged realities of North Country life and family roots in the land
05:11 - The story of Lewisburg and its iron furnace history
06:08 - The significance of towns like Woods Mills and Sterlingville in local history
07:08 - How war efforts shaped and erased small villages in the North Country
07:36 - The expansion of Pine Camp to meet WWII military needs
08:06 - The scale of military maneuvers in the 1930s and the buildup to WWII
09:05 - Iron mines supplying war materials, like Benson mines directly supporting WWII efforts
10:04 - The brutal reality of eminent domain and displacement on a massive scale
11:02 - Personal stories: The Remington family’s fight to keep their home
12:00 - Historic cemeteries remaining within Fort Drum, hosting family graves and stories
13:28 - The importance of family memories and descendants connecting through land records
14:25 - The fading yet persistent memory of Sterlingville and other villages
15:21 - The power of family documents and photographs in reconstructing lost histories
16:20 - The enduring presence of cemeteries as remnants of forgotten communities
17:18 - The remains of Lewisburg and other industrial sites still visible today
18:46 - The connection to LaRay’sville and Alpina, their histories intertwined with iron and war
19:43 - The importance of remembering these communities as more than footnotes in history
20:13 - Cemeteries inside Fort Drum illustrate the emotional and cultural ties to lost villages
21:12 - The challenge and heartbreak of visiting family graves behind gates
22:07 - The rapid military expansion during WWII, erasing communities in months
22:37 - The legacy of Fort Drum’s military training and the erasure of small towns
23:07 - Respecting both the military’s importance and the stories of displaced communities
23:35 - The significance of remembering the lost villages amidst the military history
24:04 - The physical remnants and the symbolic power of personal artifacts and records
24:33 - The idea that history survives in fragments, memories, and hidden stories
25:02 - The unsettling reality: communities were erased because they were deemed useful
25:32 - The larger implications of wartime destruction and the loss of hometowns
26:02 - A call to remember the communities lost beneath the land of Fort Drum
26:32 - Final thoughts: honoring both the history of the land and its people
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com [https://pcm.adswizz.com] for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.