New York Porch

History & Culture · Hudson Valley

Germantown Looks Across the Hudson to Palatine Memory

Germantown combines Hudson River access, Catskill sunsets, Palatine East Camp history, and nearby Hudson River School landscape memory.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026

Germantown has two strong angles right away. The town sits on the east bank of the Hudson River, with access for boating, fishing, and sunset views behind the Catskill Mountains.

The older layer reaches deeper. Town history connects the Hudson Valley landscape to the painters now grouped under the Hudson River School, and it notes that about 1,200 Palatines established East Camp on the east bank of the Hudson in 1710. That puts river access, painterly landscape, and a migration story in the same small town.

Germantown can be read as a quiet Columbia County river place, but the Palatine and Hudson River School context gives the quiet more depth. A person passing through for a sunset or a boat launch is also moving through a settlement story that is older than the view from the shore.

That combination is the charm. The Catskills sit across the water, the Hudson keeps the town visually open, and East Camp gives the place a human origin story. Germantown does not need a single big attraction to feel memorable; the layers are close enough to meet in one afternoon.

Filed under: History & Culture Germantown Columbia County germantownpalatine-historyhudson-rivercolumbia-countystory

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June 24, 2026

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