History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Neversink Carries Reservoir Memory Into Town Identity
Neversink's town-history page makes reservoir change part of the town's public identity and local memory.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 28, 2026
Neversink’s town history makes local memory feel unsettled in a very concrete way. The town came into formal existence in 1798. Later records moved through Ulster and Sullivan counties, and boundary changes made research harder.
Then the reservoir story deepened the complication. Eminent domain for two New York City reservoirs affected the town. The Neversink Reservoir lies within Neversink, and the communities of Neversink and Bittersweet were lost beneath its waters.
That gives the Catskills landscape a civic memory beyond scenery. The village of Neversink relocated to its present site along Route 55, while the Rondout Reservoir covered Eureka and part of Montela. A resident or visitor looking at roads, hamlet names, cemeteries, fairgrounds, or reservoir edges is seeing a town that had to carry older places forward after water projects changed the map.
Neversink’s story is not simple nostalgia for a vanished village. It is the everyday work of keeping records, family memory, and town identity legible after relocation. The town history lets today’s map hold both the present community and the places that no longer sit above water.