History & Culture · Southern Tier
Barker Has Hamlet Shape Instead of a Village Center
Barker's official town description points to hamlets, boundaries, and a Broome County edge rather than a single village center.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Barker reads like a town of edges and named corners. The town sits in northeastern Broome County, with Triangle to the north, Chenango County to the east, Fenton, Chenango, and Maine to the south, and Nanticoke to the west. That boundary list gives Barker a tucked-away feel on the map.
The town was formed on April 18, 1831 from what the town description calls the old state of Lisle. It does not have incorporated villages. Instead, the local geography leans on names such as Itaska and the Barker portion of Chenango Forks. That makes Barker easier to picture as a town of roads, school routes, farms, creek valleys, and office errands rather than a place built around one obvious downtown. Even the town office address in Castle Creek hints at the way nearby names share the civic work.
There is a practical clue tucked into the same shape. Barker accepts taxes locally from January through March, then Broome County handles tax collection after March. The town feels local and county-tied at the same time, which is exactly how many small New York towns work when you live inside their borders.