History & Culture · North Country
Fowler Carries a Revolutionary Name and a Many-Hamlet Map
Fowler's St. Lawrence County identity comes through its 1816 origin, Theodosius Fowler name, hamlets, village, and Sylvia Lake.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Fowler reads like a town made from several small pieces rather than one single center. It was established in 1816, formed from Russell and Rossie, and named for Theodosius Fowler of New York, a Revolutionary War soldier.
That origin gives the town a name with a person behind it, but the everyday map is the richer clue. Fowler covers 60.7 square miles and is described with six hamlets, one village, and three other named locations. Balmat, Emeryville, Fullerville, Hailesboro, Pikes Corners, and West Fowler share the town with the Village of Fowler. Sylvia Lake, Kellogg Corners, and Little York add more local names to the map.
For St. Lawrence County, that kind of spread is familiar. A town can have a clerk, highway roads, lake cabins, old hamlet names, mine-country echoes around Balmat, and a village name all at once. Fowler’s story is not one monument in the middle. It is a Revolutionary-era name stretched across a North Country town where the names on the map still matter.
If someone is trying to understand Fowler from a road sign alone, the better picture is a cluster: Fowler village, Balmat, Sylvia Lake, the smaller corners, and the long township around them.