History & Culture
Horseheads Carries a Hard Name
Horseheads' local identity ties Chemung Valley movement, canal-era Fairport, and a Revolutionary War naming story that should be told carefully.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Horseheads has a name people remember right away, but the story is heavier than the name sounds. The village tradition ties it to Sullivan’s 1779 army and pack horses. That is a vivid local origin, and it is also connected to a hard Revolutionary-era campaign.
The village had another name for a while too. It incorporated in 1837 as Fairport because of its Chemung Canal location, before the Horseheads name returned. The canal chapter shows the place as a crossroads, with a story wider than soldiers and horses.
Chemung County history keeps the wider valley in Revolutionary-era memory, including the Battle of Newtown. Discover Chemung adds the harder context: the Sullivan Expedition targeted Haudenosaunee villages and food supplies.
So Horseheads carries two local layers at once. One is canal movement, with Fairport as the old name. The other is a military-horse story tied to loss, displacement, and a campaign that deserves a careful telling.
The name is still memorable. It can still be told with local pride. It just lands better when the full frame stays nearby: Chemung Canal movement, the Fairport chapter, Sullivan’s army, and Haudenosaunee memory all tangled into one village name.