History & Culture · North Country
Watertown's Black River Still Shapes the Story
Watertown's local story comes from Black River waterpower, Public Square, local industry, and downtown places residents still use.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Watertown starts with the Black River doing real work. Early settlers chose the area because the river dropped sharply through town and made strong waterpower. You can picture the river as the thing that pulled mills, streets, workers, and business into place.
Public Square gives that river story a civic center. Land was deeded for public use in 1805, and the city history later ties Watertown to paper mills, the Garland City nickname, and F.W. Woolworth’s five-and-dime idea in 1878. Those details are small enough to remember but big enough to explain why downtown has more story than a quick drive-through suggests.
The older story still has public places attached to it. Thompson Park, Black River trails, Flower Memorial Library, historic buildings, and Paddock Arcade give residents and visitors ways to walk around Watertown instead of just reading about it.
That is the North Country shape here: a working river, a downtown common space, mill and retail history, and civic places people still use. Follow the waterpower, then look for the square, and Watertown starts to feel less like a dot on the way to somewhere else.