TRAVEL ADVISORY

 

Closure Planned for Brimfield Street at State Route 12B in the Town of Kirkland, Oneida County

 

The New York State Department of Transportation is advising motorists that Brimfield Street in the Town of Kirkland, Oneida County, will be closed to traffic between State Route 12B (Utica Street) and New Street from 6:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday, May 7, and again on Friday May 8, to facilitate drainage upgrades.

Motorists are advised to follow the signed detour utilizing Brimfield Street, New Street, and Kellogg Street. Local resident traffic within the closure will be directed by flaggers.

 

About the Department of Transportation
It is the mission of the New York State Department of Transportation to provide a safe, reliable, equitable, and resilient transportation system that connects communities, enhances quality of life, protects the environment, and supports the economic well-being of New York State.

Lives are on the line; slow down and move over for highway workers!

 

Attention: Village Green Waste

As of March 18, 2025, the Town of Kirkland no longer accepts green waste from the Village of Clinton. Please contact the Village Clerk for information on where to bring your green waste if you are a village resident.

History of Kirkland, NY

The Town of Kirkland with 10,028 residents according to the 2000 census and covering an area of 19,716 acres in the south central portion of Oneida County in Central New York, approximately nine miles southwest of Utica, was originally part of the territory of the Iroquois Nation. Three patents–Kirkland Patent on the western side of the Property Line; Brothertown Patent in the southwestern section; Coxe Patent in the northeastern portion–determined the boundary lines, owing much to the framework set forth by the Fort Stanwix Treaty Line of 1768. This Town was first formed in 1827 from the Town of Paris; two years later the Town of Marshall was set off from the Town of Kirkland, but the present boundary lines were not permanently established until adjustments were made with the Towns of New Hartford and Paris.

Within these boundaries lie the hamlets of Clark Mills, Kirkland (once Manchester), Franklin Springs (formerly Franklin Iron Works), and the Village of Clinton, the latter being almost centrally situated in the Town. In 1846 the Clark Brothers founded a textile mill which operated successfully for approximately thirty years in the hamlet of Clark Mills, located on the Oriskany Creek at the northern portion of the town. Kirkland, north of the Village of Clinton, was the scene of bustling activity from 1873 to 1898 as iron ore was hauled to its 15-ton/day blast furnace, operated by the Clinton Iron Company. In 1852 the Franklin Iron Works, also located in the Oriskany Creek valley south of Clinton, began operations which lasted for sixty years. The name which was changed to Franklin Springs took place after 1888 as a result of the Lithia water discovered by Frederick Suppe on the Dugway Road.

Upcoming Events

Announcements:

As of March 18, 2025, the Town of Kirkland is no longer accepting green waste from the Village of Clinton.

If you live in the Village of Clinton, please contact the Village Clerk for information on where to bring your green waste and green waste pickup.