Hampton Manor

Hampton Manor Ad 1927
Hampton Manor Ad 1927

By the 1920s, Albany had pretty much filled out to its current extent; the wide open lands of Pine Hills had been built up in the 1890s, and the trolleys made it possible for people to live outside the city and still get to work. The sudden growth of the personal automobile also led expansion into the suburbs, and new housing developments started to spring up. Places like Menands and east Colonie started to grow, and across the river, settlement spread beyond the hamlets that now made up the city of Rensselaer. Up the hill in East Greenbush, Veeder Realty Co. started selling building lots in Hampton Manor. This ad from 1927 promises pure spring water (“think that over, Mr. and Mrs. Albanian!”), a lake stocked with trout, and a new school and church (St. Mary’s) within the gates of the development. There was a fine state road (Columbia Turnpike, now Routes 9 & 20), two trolley stations and the Nassau bus, not to mention a very short drive across the old Greenbush bridge.

“Don’t mind the ‘Detour’ signs. They don’t apply to Hampton Manor.”

4 thoughts on “Hampton Manor

  1. Grew up there, all those trout must’ve been eaten by the snapping turtles. Definitely wasn’t considered “high class” either, kids would sometimes make fun of you for being from “the manor”. Good memories playing around that swampy pond and running though the near by sand mines though.

  2. What’s the source of the ad? I would love to see a larger version of that because I suspect most, if not all, of those houses are Sears Roebuck kit houses. Hampton Manor has one of the largest collection of Sears houses in the country.

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