History & Culture · Southern Tier
Greene Has a Chenango River Valley Name and Hamlet Pattern
Greene's local identity includes its 1792 founding, Nathanael Greene name, village core, and a set of smaller hamlets.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Greene starts with its local-history basics and then spreads into smaller named places. The Chenango County Historical Society says Greene was founded in 1792, was named after General Nathanael Greene, and includes hamlets such as Brisben, Crestmont, Fickles Corner, Genegantslet, Lower Genegantslet Corner, Quinneville, and Page Brook. The official Town and Village of Greene site is the current civic doorway.
Greene is both a village-centered place and a larger town of hamlets. That matters in Chenango County, where addresses, schools, roads, and local identity do not always follow a single downtown.
Those hamlet names are part of the value. They make Greene feel like a town with several small centers of memory, not just a village sign on a road map. Genegantslet, Page Brook, Brisben, and the other names give the local geography a lived-in texture.
The Nathanael Greene name adds the older civic layer, while the town-and-village setup adds the everyday layer. If you are moving through Chenango County, Greene is easier to understand when you hold both ideas at once: a named village core and a wider town of smaller places around it.