The villages of Walden and Maybrook are located within the town of
Montgomery, halfway between New York City and Albany. During part of the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Walden was considered the Knife
Capital of the United States; three companies specialized in producing
pocketknives, penknives, and switchblades. At the same time, Maybrook
was known as the Gateway to the East; it had the largest
railroad-switching terminal connecting rail service from the interior of
the country to the New England states. The two villages depended upon
each other: Walden manufactured the goods, and Maybrook shipped them to
market.
With carefully selected photographs and detailed text, Walden and
Maybrook traces the history of the two villages from the Colonial era to
the mid-nineteenth century. The book contains some two hundred images,
many of which have never before been published. Highlighted are the
hardworking individuals who helped the villages prosper-the knife
makers, polishers, grinders, and hefters, the prominent businesspeople
of Chesnin & Leis Clothing and Brook May coats, and the railroad
personnel who worked at the roundhouse, the engine house, and the
coaling trestle.