Online Encyclopedia

BINGHAMTON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 948 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BINGHAMTON  , a

city and the county-seat of Broome county, New York, U.S.A., in the south
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part of the state, on both banks of the north branch of the Susquehanna
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river, at the mouth of the Chenango river . Pop . (188o) 17,317; (1890) 35,005; (1900) 39,647, of whom 4272 were
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foreign-born; (1910), 48,443 . It is an important railway centre, being served by the
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Delaware & Hudson, the
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Erie, and the Delaware, Lackawanna & West-ern
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railways; and an extensive
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system of electric
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rail-ways connects it with the suburbs and neighbouring towns . Binghamton is picturesquely situated and has a number of parks, the most attractive of which are Ross Park of Too acres and Ely Park of 134 acres . Among the
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principal buildings are the city hall, the court-house, the
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post-office, the Binghamton city hospital, Stone opera-house, the Carnegie library (1904), the central high school, and a state armoury . Binghamton has also some
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fine office buildings . Among the city's educational and charitable institutions are the Lady Jane Grey school (for girls), St Joseph's academy, St Mary's home for orphans, the Susquehanna Valley
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orphan asylum, and a state hospital for the insane . Binghamton is a manufacturing centre of consider-able importance, ranking twelfth in the state in 1905 in the value of factory products, $13,907,403, which was an increase of 32.0% over the value of the factory products in 1900; among its manufactures are
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tobacco, cigars, chewing tobacco and snuff (value in 1905, $2,879,217), patent medicines (value in 1905, $2,133,198),
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flour and grist mill products ($1,089,910), men's clothing ($833,835), and, of less importance, commercial and computing scales and time recorders, chemicals, distilled liquor,
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beer, fire-alarm apparatus, overalls, agricultural implements, wagons, electrical apparatus, refined oil,
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sheet metal, paper bags and envelopes, tacks and nails, window glass, glass-
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ware, clocks, whips and furniture (especially Morris chairs) . In the
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village of Lestershire (pop. in 1910, 3775; incorporated in 1892), about 2 M. west, and in Endicott, another suburb, are large
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boot and shoe factories . The
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municipality owns and operates the
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water-
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works . When Binghamton was first settled, about 1787, it was known as Chenango Point .

Its site was originally included in the so-called "

Bingham Patent," a tract on both sides of the Susquehanna river owned by William Bingham (1751–1804), a
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Philadelphia merchant, who was a member of the
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Continental Congress in 1787–1788 and of the
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United States Senate in 1795–18o1, being president
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pro tempore of the Senate from the 16th of
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February to the 3rd of March 1797 . In 'Soo a village was laid out by an agent of Mr Bingham, and was named Bingham-ton . In 1834 it was incorporated as a village, and in 1867 was chartered as a city .

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