History & Culture · Southern Tier
Fenton's Port Crane Name Is a Chenango Canal Clue
Fenton's official history explains Port Crane through the Chenango Canal, Route 369, Chenango Valley State Park, and a later renaming for Governor Fenton.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Fenton’s old name, Port Crane, carries a transportation story. The town history begins with glacial carving of the Chenango Valley and the Chenango River forming today’s western border. Then the word “Port” starts to make sense: the Chenango Canal opened in 1837, villages grew along it, and Port Crane became a canal stop.
The same source adds Route 369 follows a good portion of the canal route, the canal passed through what is now Chenango Valley State Park, and parts of the canal prism and lock 107 are still visible there. The town name changed from Port Crane to Fenton in 1867 in honor of Governor Reuben Fenton. That gives the town a clear identity: river valley, canal infrastructure, and a renamed canal-port hamlet.
Those details make the town feel less abstract. Route 369, the old canal route, the river, and Chenango Valley State Park all help place the story on the ground.
Fenton has modern homes, roads, schools, and ordinary Broome County life. But the Port Crane name keeps the older transportation story alive. It is a reminder that a quiet hamlet can once have been part of a busy route between Binghamton and the Erie Canal.