
The lake after which the village is named
'Lake Placid' is a
village in the
Adirondack Mountains in
Essex County,
New York,
USA. As of the 2000 census, the village had a total population of 2,638. Lake Placid is named after this adjacent lake:
Lake Placid.
The 'Village of Lake Placid' is near the center of the
Town of North Elba and is southwest of
Plattsburgh.
Olympic History
While the village is a year-round resort, it is likely most known as the site of the
1980 Winter Olympics, and particularly the USA-USSR hockey game, the "
Miracle on Ice," when a group of American college students and amateurs upset the heavily-favored
Soviet national ice hockey team 4-3 and two days later won the gold medal. The victory is sometimes ranked as one of the greatest in American sports history.

The "Miracle on Ice" Arena today.

Olympic Ski Jumps

Another view of the Ski Jumps.
Lake Placid also hosted the
1932 Winter Olympics. Along with
St. Moritz,
Switzerland and
Innsbruck, Austria, it is one of the three places to have twice hosted the
Winter Olympic Games.
History
Lake Placid was founded in the early 1800s to develop a mining operation based on
iron ore discovered nearby. By 1840, the population of "North Elba" (four miles south-east of the present village near where the road to Adirondack Lodge crosses the Ausable River) consisted of 6 families. In 1845, Gerrit Smith arrived in North Elba. He not only bought up a great deal of land around the village, he also granted large tracts to his slaves, reforming the land law and reflecting his support of
Abolitionism.
The abolitionist
John Brown heard about Gerrit Smith's reforms, and left his anti-slavery activities in Kansas to buy of land, which later became known as the "Freed Slave Utopian Experiment,"
Timbucto. Upon his execution in 1859, John Brown asked to be buried on his farm, which is preserved as
John Brown Farm State Historic Site.
As leisure time increased in the late 19th century, Lake Placid was discovered by the rich and famous, drawn to the fashionable
Lake Placid Club.
Melvil Dewey, inventor of the
Dewey Decimal System, designed what was then called "Placid Park Club" in 1895 and inspired a village name change, to Lake Placid. He is also sometimes credited with introducing recreational winter sports such as
skiing and
bobsledding to the United States, or at least helping to popularize them. In actuallity, Winter Sports such as Kresta, Ski Jumping, Curling and Ice Skating were introduced to neiboring Saranac Lake for many years prior. The first International Winter Sporting Event in Saranac Lake was held in 1889. The Lake Placid Club was also the headquarters for the International Olympic Committee which brought the
1932 and the
1980 Winter Olympics to Lake Placid.
Lake Placid became an incorporated village in
1900.
Location
Lake Placid is located inside the
Adirondack Park.

Another view of the lake
Recreational Opportunities
Lake Placid is well-known among winter sports enthusiasts for its skiing, both Alpine and Crosscountry, one of only three actual bobsled rides in the North and South American continents, the open skating on the Olympic Oval where
Eric Heiden won his five Olympic Gold Medals, and one of the few places in the contiguous United States which offers dogsled and sleigh rides.

The Olympic Cauldron
===
Whiteface Mountain===
Located on Route 86 in Wilmington, NY, it is about from Lake Placid.
Whiteface Mountain's summit is at 4,867 feet, with lift-serviced terrain from 4,386 ft. and hike-to terrain from 4,650 feet. With a base elevation of 1,220 feet, Whiteface boasts the greatest vertical drop in the east at 3,430 feet. Its neighbor, Little Whiteface, tops in altitude at 3,676 ft. Whiteface has a total of of ski terrain spread out over 76 trails. of skiing area include the
"The Slides", 35 acres of true expert extreme adventure terrain. A new 13 acre terrain park was added in 2000-1 with ramps, rails, and pipes.

Another view of the Lake Placid bobsled run.
Whiteface features some of the most difficult skiing and snowboarding terrain in the United States, made even more enjoyable by the lovely weather that the mountain usually experiences for most of the winter. The ski trials receive plenty of southern exposure often causing ice to form and subtle breezes often blows snow off the trails and ice is a reoccuring problem. As a result, the mountain is commonly known as "Iceface". There is also a separate area for beginners known as Kids Kampus.
In summer, Whiteface Mountain also features gondola rides, mountain biking, and the Veteran's Memorial Highway, which allows vehicle access almost to the top of the mountain, for a panoramic view as far as thirty miles. An elevator can take even those with mobility challenges to the very top.
Hiking
Lake Placid is an excellent base from which to tackle the forty six High Peaks in the Adirondack Mountains, the successful completion of which enables the hiker/climber to join the
Adirondack Forty-Sixers.
Golf
The Barons of the Gilded Age who loved to play in Lake Placid brought their favorite game with them. Lake Placid built its first golf course in 1898, one of the first in the United States. Because of this history, Lake Placid still has the most golf courses of any area in the Adirondacks, many of them designed by famous golf course architects such as John Van Kleek, Seymour Dunn, Alexander H. Findlay, and Alister MacKenzie. The geographic features of the Adirondacks were considered reminiscent of the Scotland mountains where the game was invented, and thus a fitting canvas for original play, or "mountain golf."
Fishing
Lake Placid is near the West Branch of the Au Sable, a well-known stretch of river for fly fishing. Over six miles (10 km) of the West Branch is year-round catch-n-release artificial lures-only water.
==
Events ==
★ Since 1999 it has been a site for the annual
Ironman Triathlon, one of only 6 official Ironman Triathlons to be held in the continental US.

2006 Ironman - Lake Placid, NY
★ ESPN's Great Outdoor Games were inaugurated there in July of 2000.
★ The Lake Placid and I Love New York Horse Shows have been held at the North Elba Showgrounds for the past 37 years.
★ It is also the location of sports training facilities, especially those for winter events.
★ Each year, (in nearby
Saranac Lake, New York) there will be the Annual Winter Carnival, one of the oldest Winter Carnivals in the country complete with an Ice Palace.
★ Lake Placid is also home to the Lake Placid Sinfonietta, a professional summer chamber orchestra that has existed since 1917 and offers concerts lakeside.
Education
Post-Secondary Education
North Country Community College
Primary & Secondary Education
In Lake Placid, public education is administered by the
Lake Placid Central School District.
Lake Placid is home to five private schools:
★
Mountain Lake Academy
★
National Sports Academy
★
North Country School
★
Northwood School
★
St. Agnes School
Trivia

The Olympic Bobsleigh run from the air
.
★ Lake Placid was the first location in North America to host two Olympic games.
Los Angeles became the other when it hosted the
Summer Olympic Games for the second time in 1984.
★ The famous singer
Kate Smith, winner of the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, spent her summers in a camp on Lake Placid, in which one of the rooms was equipped as a
radio studio. She converted to
Roman Catholicism at the local
St. Agnes Church and although she died in North Carolina, it was her wish to be buried in the St. Agnes
Cemetery in Lake Placid, where her
mausoleum stands today.
★
Jack Shea, a resident of the village, became the first person to win two gold medals when he doubled in speed skating at the 1932 Winter Olympics. His Grandson won gold in the Skeleton at the
2002 Winter Olympics in
Salt Lake City, Utah. Jack Shea carried the Olympic torch through Lake Placid in 2002 shortly before his death as a victim of an alleged
[1] drunk driver. His grandson competed in the Olympics that year in his honor.
★ The Olympic Center in Lake Placid boasts the greatest amount of ice surface in the world.
★ Ted Keizer, the hiking ultramarathoner better known as "Cave Dog," set the current record for climbing all 46 Adirondack High Peaks in June 2002, with a time of 3 days, 18 hours, and 14 minutes.
★
Santa's Workshop (in nearby
Wilmington, New York) at the North Pole has been in operation since 1949. It was one of the first
theme parks in the United States, and featured the world's first petting zoo. On December 16, 1953, The U.S. Postal Service awarded the North Pole "Rural Postal Station" status and Santa started getting his mail home delivered.
★ The
1950 Nordic skiing World Championships were the only time the event was held in the United States in a non-Olympic year, and one of only three to ever held outside of
Europe (
Thunder Bay, Ontario,
Canada in
1995 and
Sapporo,
Japan in
2007 are the others.).
★ Alfred Hitchcock's only screwball comedy, ''
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941 film)'', takes place partially in Lake Placid. It is where
Carole Lombard flees to when she wants to make
Robert Montgomery jealous. ''Lake Placid Serenade'' was a 1944 musical starring
Vera Hruba Ralston,
William Frawley,
Roy Rogers, and his horse
Trigger.
★ Lake Placid is home to one of the last remaining
Howard Johnson's restaurants.
★ The town of
Lake Placid, Florida is where Melvil Dewey died in 1931, after suffering bitter losses in the stock market crash of 1929. He formed a branch of the Lake Placid club there, and successfully petitioned the Florida legislature to rename the town.
★ There is no 30 foot crocodile in Lake Placid, the lake. ''
Lake Placid (film)'', the 1999 movie, was filmed mainly in the town of Shawnigan Lake, BC, Canada, which was pretending to be in Maine.
★ On November 20th, 1995, Two-time Olympic Gold medalist
Russian figure skater '
Sergei Grinkov' collapsed and died from a massive heart attack while he and his wife were practicing in
Lake Placid for their upcoming performance in the 1995-1996
Stars on Ice tour. His last dinner was at The Boathouse Restaurant.
Transportation
Lake Placid is served by nearby
Adirondack Regional Airport in
Saranac Lake, from the village. Other relatively nearby airports include
Albany International Airport and
Burlington International Airport. Lake Placid is also served by an
Amtrak Thruway Motorcoach connection through
Westport via Ground Force 1 Limousine Service. In addition, Lake Placid is served by Adirondack Trailways of the
Trailways Transportation System.
Lake Placid is not located at any
interstate highway. It is connected to
Interstate 87 to the east by
New York State Route 73,
New York State Route 86, and
New York State Route 9N. County Roads 21, 31 and 35 also service the community.
Lake Placid Airport (LKP) is south of the village.
Geography
Lake Placid is located at (44.285691, -73.985404).
According to the
United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 3.9
km² (1.5
mi²). 3.6 km² (1.4 mi²) of it is land and 0.4 km² (0.2 mi²) of it (9.87%) is water.
The village is located near the south end of a lake called Lake Placid. More immediate to the village is Mirror Lake, which lies between the village and Lake Placid.
Demographics
As of the
census of 2000, there were 2,638 people, 1,303 households, and 604 families residing in the village. The
population density was 738.1/km² (1,913.2/mi²). There were 1,765 housing units at an average density of 493.8/km² (1,280.1/mi²). The racial makeup of the village was 95.75%
White, 0.68%
African American, 0.45%
Native American, 0.91%
Asian, 0.57%
Pacific Islander, 0.19% from
other races, and 1.44% from two or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 0.91% of the population.
There were 1,303 households out of which 22.3% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 34.1% were
married couples living together, 8.4% had a female householder with no husband present, and 53.6% were non-families. 45.7% of all households were made up of individuals and 16.9% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.02 and the average family size was 2.93.
In the village the population was spread out with 22.4% under the age of 18, 8.5% from 18 to 24, 33.2% from 25 to 44, 19.3% from 45 to 64, and 16.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37 years. For every 100 females there were 92.4 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.3 males.
The median income for a household in the village was $28,239, and the median income for a family was $43,042. Males had a median income of $26,585 versus $21,750 for females. The
per capita income for the village was $18,507. About 8.5% of families and 13.2% of the population were below the
poverty line, including 13.3% of those under age 18 and 17.8% of those age 65 or over.
External links
★
Official Website of the Village of Lake Placid
★
Lake Placid information
★
Lake Placid tourism information
★
Lake Placid Olympic Authority