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History & Culture · Adirondacks & North Country

Massena's Story Follows Power and the St. Lawrence

Massena's story runs from mineral springs to hydropower, aluminum, and the St. Lawrence Seaway.

Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026

Massena’s identity comes in layers: mineral water, aluminum, hydropower, and ships. Sulfur springs made Massena Springs a resort economy, with water bottled and shipped to people who could not travel there.

Around 1900, Henry H. Warren’s company dug a power canal between the Grasse River and the St. Lawrence, using a 45-foot drop to make hydro power. That power helped draw the Pittsburgh Reduction Company, later Alcoa. In the 1950s, the St. Lawrence-Franklin D. Roosevelt Power Project and the Seaway reshaped the river edge again.

Water is the through line: mineral springs, power canals, industrial electricity, and the St. Lawrence navigation system.

That gives Massena a big-river identity that is wider than a simple factory story. The town’s past is resort water, working power, aluminum, ships, and a borderland river all moving through the same place.

The 45-foot drop detail makes the power story physical. Massena’s industry did not arrive by accident. It followed water, engineering, and the St. Lawrence setting.

That is why Massena can feel so different from smaller North Country towns nearby. Its local story is tied to big infrastructure, big water, and big industry, but it still begins with springs and river geography.

Filed under: History & Culture Massena St. Lawrence County massenast-lawrence-riverhydropowerseawayaluminum

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