History & Culture · Southern Tier
Binghamton Town Pairs Old Rural Roots With Town Hall Paperwork
Town of Binghamton pairs a long rural-town history with the everyday mechanics of meetings, permits, newsletters, and water/sewer questions.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
The Town of Binghamton has to explain itself because the neighboring city owns so much of the name in people’s heads.
The town story reaches back to William Bingham’s 1786 land purchase, the 1855 split from the Town of Chenango, and boundary changes that left a little over 15,000 acres by 1890.
Even the 1975 town logo tries to hold several ideas at once: rural atmosphere, heritage, present growth, and future anticipation. That is a lot to ask from a logo, but it fits a town living beside a much louder city name.
The older rural frame still sits right beside ordinary paperwork. Board meetings, Town Talk newsletters, assessment, building codes and permits, planning and zoning boards, taxes, open burning, winter parking, water and sewer, and downloadable forms are all part of the daily machinery. The local texture is not one landmark. It is a town government rhythm running beside a familiar city label.
That distinction is practical as well as historical. The Town of Binghamton has its own land-use habits, road and utility questions, and meeting calendar, with rural roots still showing through the forms. When the city name gets too loud, the town’s paperwork quietly tells the older story.