History & Culture · Capital Region
Troy's Uncle Sam Trail Carries a Rail Line Memory
Troy ties the Uncle Sam story to a modern trail that follows part of an old railroad route.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified July 4, 2026
Troy’s Uncle Sam story is easy to miss from signs alone. It runs through Sam Wilson, a Troy meat packer during the War of 1812. His U.S.-stamped barrels of meat rations helped grow the Uncle Sam story, and Congress later saluted Wilson of Troy as the source of the national symbol.
The Uncle Sam Bike Trail keeps that story from sitting still. It runs seven miles from North Troy to South Troy, with waterfront views, off-road pieces, and on-road bike infrastructure. Three miles follow the old Troy & Boston Railroad line.
That is a very Troy mix: river city, rail city, working city, and national-symbol city all sharing one route. At the south end, the trail connects near the Troy-Menands Bridge with the Mohawk-Hudson Bike-Hike Trail, part of New York’s Empire State Trail.
So the trail is not just a name with patriotic polish on it. It gives people a way to move through Troy’s older layers. You can ride or walk past pieces of waterfront, old railroad memory, and the Uncle Sam story without needing a museum case to explain the whole thing.
That kind of everyday path suits Troy. The city has big history, but it often shows up in brick, bridges, signs, old work corridors, and routes people still use.