Hague is a town in northeastern Warren County, New York, United States located on the scenic Lake George.
[5] In 1757, during the French and Indian War, Sabbath Day Point was used as an encampment and staging area for the French Army and nearly two thousand Odawa in an expedition to capture the British Fort William Henry at the southern end of Lake George.
While at the Sabbath Day Point camp, they conducted an ambush of a group of British soldiers and captured many.
Later at the Sabbath Day Point base camp, the Indians cannibalized some of the captured British prisoners.
Sabbath Day Point was used a landing place in 1758 for British armies en route to attack the French at Fort Carillion and again in 1759 when General Jeffery Amherst finally succeeded in capturing Fort Carillon.
He was Postmaster General and in this capacity, he conducted temporary postal processing functions on each of his stays at Sabbath Day Point.
Bobbi Bryant Taylor serves as the current editor and publisher of the Hague Chronicle.
Throughout the 1970s, a bitter battle raged between seasonal and year-round residents over the viability of the school, with a student population of about 200 in grades K-12.
Many argued that consolidation with the Ticonderoga Central School District to the north would reduce taxes in the Town.
[citation needed] Through the last decades of its existence, Hague athletic teams were known as the Raiders, using various depictions of Indians as their mascot.