History & Culture · Central New York
Hamilton Links Village Memory to Colgate Roots
Hamilton's local story starts with Paynes Corner, village backing for a college, and Colgate archives that keep town memory close.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 28, 2026
Hamilton’s college story and town story are tangled from the beginning, which is why “college town” feels a little too thin here. Samuel Payne and his wife Betsey were early settlers in 1794, and Payne’s Corner, or Payne’s Settlement, became an early local name.
Samuel Payne’s farm sat on land that is now part of the Colgate campus. That is a tidy bit of geography: the campus is not just next to the village memory, it sits on it.
The wider town setting matters too. Hamilton belongs to the Chenango and Sangerfield River valleys, nearby hamlets, dairy and beef farms, and village streets shaped by the college presence. Colgate University Libraries adds another layer by keeping local and regional history collections for the village, town, and Central New York. Papers, community-group records, business records, photographs, maps, and similar materials give residents a way to trace the place beyond a semester calendar.
A visitor may notice campus paths, storefronts, and rural roads all in one afternoon.
Hamilton’s flavor comes from that closeness: early settlement name, university archive, farm country, and walkable village life still explaining one another.