History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Batavia Town Is the Hamlets Around the Land-Office City
The Town of Batavia's own history turns the area outside the city into a set of hamlets shaped by mills, roads, rail, and the old land-office geography.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Batavia town needs a different lens than Batavia city. In 1802, Genesee County and the Town of Batavia were the same huge local unit, covering much of Western New York. Joseph Ellicott then selected a spot near a bend in Tonawanda Creek for the land office and mill, creating the settlement that later became the village and city.
The town story gets especially interesting in the outlying hamlets. Bushville, Daw’s Corners, East Pembroke, West Batavia, Newkirk, Five Corners, and Putnam Settlement give the town a ring of smaller names around the famous land-office city. East Pembroke carries mill and railroad memory; Daw’s Corners sits by a road junction; other hamlets point to older local patterns that can disappear if everything gets called Batavia.
That is the trick to reading the town. Batavia city holds the big land-office name, but Batavia town is the surrounding countryside, creek bends, road corners, mills, rail traces, and hamlet memory. The map feels much better once those smaller names are allowed to stay visible.
It also explains why town and city identity should not be blended too quickly. The city may be the obvious center, but the town carries the ring of places that grew around it.