The Saratoga County History Center is pleased to announce the publication of a new book on local history. Off the Northway is a compilation of 83 articles written by longtime local journalist Stephen Williams, who retired after a 42-year career at the Daily Gazette in Schenectady, NY.
A collection of his weekly “Off the Northway” newspaper columns, and other stories spanning the period from 2005 through 2020, the book will be released and become available for sale beginning Tuesday, June 28 at 7 PM at a presentation and book signing by the author at Brookside Museum (6 Charlton Steet, Ballston Spa), home of the History Center. Pre-registration for this event can be made at https://brooksidemuseum.networkforgood.com/events/44328-off-the-northway-book-launch-and-presentation. The book will also be available at local bookstores, and additional book signing sessions will be announced.
Off the Northway provides a reporter’s up-close perspective on the events that impacted people living in Saratoga County during this 15-year period, and reflects on the changes seen across the county stemming from the construction of the Adirondack Northway six decades ago. As with all good story tellers, Mr. Williams’s articles often capture the past and give readers pause to think about the future. “The book not only takes the reader down memory lane, but many articles have continued relevance to the communities that straddle the Northway,” notes Jim Richmond, chairman of the History Center’s Publications Committee.
One of the principal topics is the long rollercoaster history of the dream, design, negotiations for, and construction of the $15 billion GlobalFoundries semiconductor facility in Malta, which recently announced plans to construct a second plant at its vast Luther Forest location.
Among the other topics Mr. Williams covered during his tenure at the Gazette, and included in Off the Northway, are stories about the ongoing efforts to manage development and environmental protection, some of the unusual local history of Saratoga County and Saratoga Springs, and his takes on local politics and politicians of the early years of the 21st century. One of the major players in the GlobalFoundries story, state Senator Joe Bruno, is covered extensively, as are politicians like state senators Jim Tedisco and Roy McDonald.
“Though he later fell from grace, Senator Bruno is among the key people who reshaped the Capital Region into a tech hub and brought GlobalFoundries to Saratoga County,” Williams writes. “I wanted to tell that story and to write about the changes I’ve seen – as well as the things that haven’t changed – throughout my career. Each story has an introduction explaining why it was written and sometimes a postscript explaining how the issues raised may have played out.”