History & Culture · Western New York
Bergen grew from a hacked road, a railroad, and a rebuild
Bergen's village history runs from a rough Northwoods road to railroad settlement, fires, brick rules, and iron storefronts.
Published July 7, 2026 · Last verified July 7, 2026
Bergen has a village story with a good first scene: in 1801, a road was hacked through the thick Northwoods from LeRoy to Lake Ontario. That is how the village history begins the local settlement story, and it makes the place feel less like a dot on Route 19 and more like a hard-won opening in the woods.
Families from Connecticut settled the area from 1805 to 1810. Stores and crossroads followed. Then the railroad came through in 1836 and pulled attention toward a new business-and-house pattern near the tracks.
The village history says that area carried several names: Wardville, after the Levi Ward family; Cork, after Irish settlers during and after railroad construction; and Lower Bergen. The two settled areas eventually connected, and the surrounding residences were incorporated as the Village of Bergen in 1877.
Then fire rewrote the street. Business-area fires in 1866 and 1880 pushed the Village Board to require brick, stone, or wrought iron construction in that district. Later fires changed individual buildings too, but the stronger material choice left a mark.
The west side of the district south of the railroad is on the National Register of Historic Places, with 1880 wrought-iron storefronts and transom windows part of the reason.
So Bergen’s charm is not just small-town neatness. It is road, railroad, fire, rebuilding, and storefronts that remember the lesson.