How To Reach the Park
The park is on the upper Hudson River, 28 miles north
of Albany, N.Y., between the villages of Stillwater and Schuylerville,
and may be reached by automobile from the north or south over State
Route 32, connecting with U.S. 4 at Bemis Heights and Schuylerville.
From the west, convenient connections with U.S. 9 may be made over State
Routes 9P and 423. Taxi service is available from Mechanicville,
Schuylerville, and Saratoga Springs.
About Your Visit
The park and its facilities are open from early
spring until late autumn, depending upon weather
conditionsnormally from April 1 to November 30.
A museum, containing relics of the Revolutionary
Period and exhibits designed to present the story of the Battles of
Saratoga and the Burgoyne Campaign, is open daily, Sundays and holidays
included, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Park literature is available in the
museum. The John Neilson House, used as quarters for American staff
officers during the battles, is also usually open to visitors.
Informational signs and markers along the park roads will assist you to
visualize events connected with the battles.
Special service, without charge, is provided for
school classes, civic groups, and organizations when arrangements are
made in advance through the park administration.
Administration
In 1938, Congress authorized the establishment of
Saratoga National Historical Park. In 1941, under this authority, 1,429
acres of historically important land, previously acquired by the State
of New York, were accepted by the Federal Government for administration
and protection as a National Historical Park Project. Later, other
historically significant parts of the battlefield were acquired, and the
establishment of the park was accomplished on June 22, 1948. The present
area is almost 4 square miles.
Saratoga National Historical Park is administered by
the National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior.
Communications regarding the park should be addressed to the
Superintendent, Saratoga National Historical Park, R.F.D. No. 1,
Stillwater, N.Y.
Suggested Readings
FULLER, J. F. C., Decisive Battles of the
U.S.A. Harper Bros., New York, 1942.
NICKERSON, HOFFMAN, The Turning Point of the
Revolution. Houghton Muffin Company, Boston and New York, 1928.
WHITTEN, F. E., The American War of
Independence. Dodd, Mead & Company, New York, 1931.
American combination knapsack and haversack.
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