Binghamton
Binghamton is a city located in the Southern Tier of New York in the United States. It is located near the Pennsylvania border, situated in a bowl-shaped valley at the confluence of the Susquehanna and Chenango Rivers. Binghamton is the county seat of Broome County and is the principal city and cultural center of the Greater Binghamton metropolitan area (also known as the Triple Cities), home to a quarter million people. The population of the city itself, according to the 2010 census, is 47,376.
From the days of the railroad, Binghamton was a transportation crossroads and a manufacturing center, known at different times for the production of cigars, shoes, and high-tech products. IBM was founded in the region, and Edwin Link invented the flight simulator in the city, leading to a notable concentration of electronics- and defense-oriented firms that continue to exist to this day. The population of the city has declined significantly in the second half of the 20th century, from a high of 85,000 in 1950, a result of suburbanization and economic stagnation. The region lost a significant portion of its manufacturing-based industry, following cuts made by defense firms after the end of the Cold War. Some, but not all, of these jobs have been replaced by significant retail development and the growth of the region as an educational center.
Today, Greater Binghamton is home to Binghamton University, a driving force in the community as an academic, athletic, and arts center, along with a continued concentration of high-tech firms, including Lockheed Martin, IBM, BAE Systems, and Rockwell Collins. Despite the loss of industry, Binghamton still retains a very ethnically diverse population.
History
The city was named after William Bingham, a wealthy Philadelphian who bought the surrounding land in 1792. Before that, the first known people of European descent to come to the area were the troops of the Sullivan Expedition in 1779, during the American Revolutionary War.
The community was first settled around 1802 and was known as Chenango Point. Binghamton was first incorporated in 1834 as a village of the Town of Binghamton. Binghamton became a city in 1867. Abel Bennett, who made a fortune as owner of the Pennsylvania Coal Company, was the city’s first mayor. His extensive property on the city’s west side is known as the Abel Bennett Tract.
The New York State Inebriate Asylum opened in 1858 on the eastern end of Binghamton. It was the first ever center to treat alcoholism as a disease, but by 1879 was converted into a hospital for the mentally ill. The main hospital building, designed by Isaac Perry, is now a New York State and National Historical Landmark. This facility is currently being developed as a clinical campus for Upstate Medical University.
Valley of Opportunity: Growth as a manufacturing hub
Binghamton was nicknamed the Parlor City for its neat streets and attractive homes, including many stately mansions. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many immigrants moved to the area, finding an abundance of jobs, leading them to call it the Valley of Opportunity. Early on, Binghamton had been the second-largest manufacturer of cigars in the United States. However, by the early 1920s, the major employer of the region became Endicott Johnson, a shoe manufacturer whose development of welfare capitalism resulted in many amenities for local residents. Binghamton’s population began growing rapidly from this influx, with many European immigrants settling in the area.
During the Second World War, this growth continued as IBM, which was founded in Greater Binghamton, began emerging as a global leader in technology. IBM’s presence, coupled with Greater Binghamton being the birthplace of the Link flight simulator, led to an unusually large concentration of engineers living in the area. Other major manufacturers included Ansco and General Electric. Until the Cold War ended, the area never experienced an economic downfall, due in part to its defense-heavy industries. The population peaked at around 85,000 in 1950.
Binghamton saw other companies grow during this time. Some of the more notable businesses included Valvoline, which started here before moving, and the Nineteen Hundred Washer Company, which merged to form Whirlpool. Another important, if dubious, product from the era was Swamp Root, a famous patent medicine developed in the late 19th century. The original Dick’s Sporting Goods started out as a fishing store in the East Side of the City of Binghamton in 1948, and the business remained headquartered in Binghamton until 1994.
In 1913, 31 people perished in the Binghamton Clothing Company fire, which resulted in numerous reforms to the New York fire code. Major floods in 1935 and 1936 resulted in a number of deaths, and washed out the Ferry Street Bridge (now the Clinton Street Bridge). The floods were devastating, and resulted in the construction of flood walls along the length of the Susquehanna and Chenango Rivers.
Later development
As was typical in many cities, urban renewal dominated much of the construction during the 1960s and early 1970s, with many of Binghamton’s ornate buildings torn down during this period. The construction included the creation of Government Plaza, the Broome County Veterans Memorial Arena, and North Shore Dr. (NY 363). In 1973, the Kopernik Space Center, the largest public observatory in the northeastern United States, was built. However, despite this sweeping overhaul, the city fell into decline as businesses moved out to the suburbs and away from the region.
With the Cold War coming to a close, a large portion of the defense-related industries in the area suffered severe cutbacks and closures, with several high-profile sales scavenging many local firms. This was compounded by a large series of layoffs at IBM throughout the early 1990s. As a result, the region went into an economic recession. Today, the city is attempting to diversify its economic base in order to spur revitalization. Major emphasis has been put on Binghamton University. A downtown campus was built in 2007, and there are currently plans to create several student housing complexes downtown. In 2007, Binghamton was named the ninth-greenest city in the U.S. by Country Home magazine.
Tragedy has also hit in recent years. While flooding has been common with Binghamton sitting at the confluence of two rivers, a major flood was able to overcome the city’s flood walls and wreak havoc in June, 2006, causing millions of dollars in damage. The city’s American Civic Association is the location of the April 3, 2009 shootings, which left 14 dead.
Geography
Binghamton is a small city in Upstate New York, located between the Finger Lakes region (to the west) and the Catskill Mountains (to the east), at 42°06′08″N 75°54′42″W (42.102222, -75.911667). It lies right at the confluence of two rivers (the Chenango and the Susquehanna) and the junction of three major highways (I-81, I-88, and Route 17, soon to be I-86)–making it easily accessible to places like New York City, Syracuse, Albany, Philadelphia, Scranton, and Buffalo.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 11.0 square miles (28.6 km²). 10.4 square miles (27.0 km²) of it is land and 0.6 square miles (1.6 km²) of it (5.43%) is water.
The north branch of the Susquehanna River passes through downtown Binghamton. This branch rises in eastern New York and receives a number of tributaries above Binghamton, most notably the Chenango, which joins from the north just outside of the business district. Major floods occurred in the city during 1865, 1936 and 2006.
In 1935 the Chenango suffered a flash flood, which was damaging, but less severe once it joined the larger Susquehanna. So much water came from the Chenango, that the Susquehanna flowed backwards for some distance above the confluence. In 1972 the remnants of Hurricane Agnes flooded the entire Susquehanna basin downstream from Binghamton, but the damage in the city was minor.
In 2006, the Susquehanna flooded again in Binghamton causing massive amounts of damage in the city and the entire metropolitan area. The Exchange Street and Washington Street bridges were flooded and the height of the river surpassed the flood walls on North Shore Drive, Court Street, and Conklin Ave. The damage was extensive enough to force large scale evacuations, including that of Lourdes Hospital which was unable to pump water out of its basement fast enough.
Climate
Binghamton has a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb), with cold, snowy winters and warm, wet summers. Snowfall is significant, with an annual total of 77.3 inches (196 cm). Binghamton is not as greatly affected by lake-effect snow as the cities to the northwest (Syracuse) and closer to the Great Lakes, but persistent snow bands from the lakes do occasionally result in moderate snows. Binghamton receives significant snows at times during the year from Nor’easter storms as well.
Summers in Binghamton are typified by warmer, less humid days with occasional temperature spikes into the upper 80s and lower 90s. Higher temperatures have occurred, but are very uncommon. As with most cities in upstate New York, precipitation in Binghamton is spread evenly throughout the year; there is no “dry season.”
Cityscape
Chenango Point’s incorporation as a village and eventually as the City of Binghamton, united various communities located on both shores of the Susquehanna and Chenango rivers. The majority of the city’s population and development lies along the rolling terrain nearest the riverbanks with sparse development in the hills that define the city limits. Currently, Binghamton encompasses seven neighborhoods; Center City, the Westside, the Southside, the Eastside, the Northside, the First Ward and Ely Park.
Binghamton is known for its bicycling and walking clubs, facilities, and trails. The Downtown and Northside River Walk is an urban trail starting at the Confluence and travels up the Chenango river, past Off Track Betting ( a horse betting shop), The Martin Luther King, Jr. Promenade, Noyes Island with its large power station, and ending at Cheri A. Lindsey Park.
Architecture
Neighborhoods
• Center City
Downtown Binghamton, also known as “Center City,” is the Southern Tier’s regional administrative, business, entertainment and transportation center. Every first Friday of the month, a trolley travels around Washington Street at different cafes and shops as artists showcase different pieces and may include auctions.This neighboorhod is scattered with urban blight (within the residential section, from Caroll St east to the Brandywine Highway).
• Westside
West of Downtown, across the Chenango River, lies the Westside. The neighborhood is the city’s largest by population, of which a significant proportion are SUNY Binghamton students.
Due to its large population, the district is mainly residential and its character ranges from urban to suburban. The housing stock ranges from small to large, detached, single and double-family houses to attached row-houses and large apartment buildings. Generally, the section of the neighborhood south of Seminary Avenue towards Riverside Drive and the Susquehanna River is inhabited by middle to upper-class residents, while the area north of Seminary Avenue towards Main Street and the rail tracks is inhabited by working-class residents and students from the neighboring colleges.
Main Street forms the Westside’s commercial corridor made up of various forms of retail consisting of several large supermarkets, pharmacies, bank branches, pubs, restaurants, auto shops and a few strip malls. Several specialty “Mom and Pop” shops are scattered along the route as well. Apart from commercial Main Street and some industrial buildings one block north, along the Norfolk Southern tracks, the Westside is primarily a residential neighborhood.
It contains Binghamton High School (formerly Binghamton Central High School), which is noted for Helen Foley Theater, named by Rod Serling for his drama teacher. A carousel in the middle of Recreation Park once had a carving of Rod Serling’s name that has since been painted over. Serling depicts a similar scenario in “The Twilight Zone: Walking Distance,” which shows a young child is carving his name into a carousel modeled after the one in Recreation Park.
• Southside
The Southside straddles the south bank of the Susquehanna River. It is home to Binghamton General Hospital (an affiliate of United Health Services). It is home to a few strip malls with eateries and convenience stores and the Crowley Food’s Corporation. It is generally separated into three sides, southwest, southeast, and Conklin Heights as the students on each side go to separate schools. The southwest is located on most of South Mountain and has half of Washington Valley, and southeast is located on most of Ross Mountain, named after Ross Park. Saratoga Heights are a few streets located on the edge of the southeast side that are considered governmental projects.
The Binghamton Zoo at Ross Park, the 5th oldest zoo in the country, is also located on the Southside. The Southside is connected to downtown Binghamton by the State Street Bridge, Exchange Street Bridge, Tompkins Street Bridge and the historic pedestrian and cyclist only South Washington Street Bridge. It borders the Town of Vestal, New York to the West via Vestal Avenue and the Town of Conklin, New York to the East via Conklin Avenue.
• Eastside
The Eastside lies east of the downtown area along the north bank of the Susquehanna River. The neighborhood is largely residential with commercial corridors along both Robinson and Court streets. Pockets of industry lie scattered along is western and southern boundaries. The Eastside is also known as home to the Greater Binghamton Health Center which is the region’s state administered mental health and hygiene facility. It borders Kirkwood, New York to the East via Upper Front Street (State Route 12).
• Northside
The Northside is located just north of downtown across the Norfolk Southern rail tracks. The Village of Port Dickinson and the Town of Dickinson lie to its north, the town of town of Fenton lies to its east while the Chenango River creates its western boundary.
The Northside is a light commercial, industrial and working-class residential section of the city. It contains portions of the Martin Luther King, Jr.-Chenango River Promenade as Cheri Lindsey Park, which is known for its vert ramps and bowls. Chenango Street serves as the area’s “main drag” and runs north-south through the neighborhood.
• First Ward
The First Ward is largely a residential neighborhood best known for the antique shops that line Clinton Street. The neighborhood stretches west from Chenango River to the Johnson City border and lies between the Norfolk Southern tracks to the south and Route 17 to the north.
• Ely Park
Ely Park is Binghamton’s northern most neighborhood and is best known for its municipal golf course. It lies on portions of Mount Prospect and of the other hills north of the West Side and First Ward. A government subsidized housing project known simply as the Ely Park Apartments is located there.










