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==History== Up until the end of [[World War I]], Putnam Lake was a small rural hamlet called '''Valleyville''', consisting mainly of dairy farms. In the years leading into the [[Great Depression]], failing farms were bought by developers McGolrick Realty Co. in association with Warren and Arthur Smadbeck, to create a [[summer colony|recreational community]] for [[New York City]] citizens. In 1930, the State Line Golf and Country Club in association with the Smadbecks' New York Daily Mirror Holding Co. bought five farms, totaling {{convert|1111|acre|km2}} of land in [[Patterson, New York|Patterson]], encroaching [[New Fairfield, Connecticut]]. Morlock Brook was dammed, flooding the area of Valleyville, creating the {{convert|200|acre|km2|adj=on}} lake. The area around Putnam Lake was divided into 11,000 plots, each {{convert|20|by|100|ft}}, which were to be occupied by summer cottages, general stores, restaurants, gas stations, dance pavilions, and taverns. The ''[[New York Daily Mirror]]'' first published advertisements for the community in 1931, and 75 percent of the lots were sold in the first year. Some 2000 homes were built by 1932, which made Putnam Lake the most densely populated community in Patterson, if only for the summer. Some families made Putnam Lake their year-round residence, and a school house was constructed where the [[Veterans of Foreign Wars]] building now stands on Fairfield Drive. The Putnam Lake Property Owners Association, now known as the Putnam Lake Community Council, was formed in the 1930s, with Herbert M. Holton as its first president. The PLCC was, and still is, a volunteer organization which collected dues from families living in Putnam Lake. The PLCC once provided paved roads, electricity, and fire protection, as well as social and recreational activities for Putnam Lake families including the community swimming pool, clubhouse, and tennis court. The PLCC now owns and is responsible for the beaches, parks, Memorial Field, and the boat house. In May 1952, Memorial Field, to be dedicated to the Putnam Lake casualties of [[World War II]], was proposed to replace the swimming pool, which had not been used since the early 1930s because it was contaminated with seepage and infested with [[leech]]es. Construction proceeded through the leadership of Henry Sherer, and in 1955, Edward Angerola, chairmen of the Memorial Field committee. Tiles were used to divert water running through the ground, and fill was brought in from the land surrounding the firehouse. Memorial Field's baseball diamond and field is used in the warmer months. In 2011 a petition was circulated to create a park district. The petition was certified by the Town of Patterson and the property and assets were transferred to the Town at the end of 2012.
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