History & Culture · Western New York
Hume is Genesee River country with hamlet-scale texture
Hume's identity comes from Genesee River country, hamlet names, and a town-government layer in northern Allegany County.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 28, 2026
Hume works at a hamlet scale, and that is part of its local feel. The town route runs through Fillmore, while the comprehensive-plan and county context place Hume in the Genesee River Valley at Allegany County’s northeast corner.
The pattern on the ground is specific: Fillmore, Hume, Wiscoy, Rossburg, Mills, routes 19 and 19A, agricultural land, and the Genesee River corridor.
That makes Hume feel like more than a drive-through name on a rural road. A resident may think in terms of Fillmore errands, Wiscoy or Rossburg fire-company ties, a town board meeting, a field edge, or a creek crossing before reaching for a countywide label. The place is quiet, but the map is not blank.
The local flavor is concrete: town services, hamlet names, valley roads, and river geography all stacked into one small map with familiar crossroads and farm edges. Property, meeting, road, or records questions may start with the town layer, while Allegany County context helps explain the wider valley setting.
It is the kind of place where a hamlet name can be more useful than a broad regional label. Fillmore, Wiscoy, Rossburg, and the Genesee River each help narrow the conversation.