History & Culture · Southern Tier
Tioga’s Town Story Still Follows Pipe Creek and Old Chemung Lines
The Town of Tioga history page ties today’s town to the Old Town of Chemung, Pipe Creek, mills, and river-flat geography.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 28, 2026
Tioga’s town history gives the place a deeper backstory than a Southern Tier road label. The town has served the community since 1788, and its early name story runs through the Old Town of Chemung, Owego, and Tioga as legislation shifted the map. That kind of name movement is worth noticing because today’s town grew from older county and creek-country arrangements rather than appearing all at once.
The landscape has the same layered feel. Tioga includes 35,805 acres, mostly upland with smaller areas of riverbed flats, and Pipe and Catatonk Creeks are named as chief watercourses. Those details give the municipal history something physical to hold onto.
Major William Ransom’s mills on Pipe Creek turn the geography into a settlement story: water, work, roads, and names lining up in one place. Tioga’s civic identity still follows old creek lines and early town decisions.
That is why the town history feels more useful than a simple founding date. Pipe Creek, Catatonk Creek, uplands, flats, mills, and old Chemung-era boundaries give Tioga a shape that still fits the land.
It is quiet history, but it helps a map name feel older and more local than the road beside it.