History & Culture · Southern Tier
Davenport keeps local memory in the historian's office
Davenport keeps local memory close to Town Hall, with a historian and historical society giving old records a real public doorway.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 27, 2026
Davenport’s local memory has a front door. The town posts a historian page, and the Davenport Historical Society gives that work a physical address upstairs in the Town Hall building. In a rural town, that matters. An old road, family name, school memory, or local decision may not be easy to solve with a quick search.
The plain detail is the memorable one: the historical society is open to the public on the second and fourth Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. That turns history into something you can actually plan around. It has a room, a calendar, and people who can help connect the clues.
That schedule also gives the town’s older material a neighborly pace, with regular hours instead of a vague promise.
Davenport does not need one grand landmark to be memorable. Its story is records, volunteers, town-hall rooms, and a regular window when the past is reachable. That gives the town a neighborly kind of depth. The old material is not hidden in a faraway archive; it is upstairs, close to everyday civic life.