Endwell, New York Endwell, New York Endwell is positioned in New York Endwell - Endwell Location inside the state of New York Endwell is a hamlet (and census-designated place) positioned in the town of Union in Broome County, New York, United States.

Although most kids residing in Endwell that attend enhance schools are served through the Maine-Endwell School District, some attend the Union-Endicott School District.

Hooper was part of the town of Union in Broome County and first appears on a map in the early 1850s as a depot of the newly constructed Erie Railroad at the intersection of what is now Hooper Road and the Norfolk Southern Railway.

(The initial site of Hooper is now underneath the overpass carrying Hooper Road over the barns tracks and State Route 17 - C.) The chief road along the north bank of the Susquehanna River, existing since colonial times and long before as an Indian trail, passed just to the south.

It was common practice at the time to name depots for landowners who donated or leased territory to the barns to construct a depot, and this is where the name "Hooper" came from.

Up until 1890, the only settlements on the north side of the Susquehanna River between Binghamton and Owego were Hooper and Union (at the intersection of what is now Route 26 - N and Route 17 - C).

A US postal service titled Hooper was established in one of the general stores near this site in 1853, and "Hooper" was the term generally used for the unincorporated region of the town of Union between the villages of Johnson City and Endicott until "Endwell" was adopted in 1921.

The Town Council of Union has been the small-town government of what is now Endwell since 1791, although over the years some functions have been taken over by Broome County (poor relief/social services) and by New York State (policing).

Hooper School (now demolished), positioned a quarter mile west of the depot on the north side of East Main Street, provided major education (kindergarten-8th grade, K-6 after 1954) for region kids from 1923 to 1971.

A nationally recognized "state-of-the-art" school when it was built, Hooper School supplanted the barns depot as the center of the community.

Graduates of Hooper School who went on to what was then called "secondary" education attended Union-Endicott High School until the opening of Maine-Endwell Central High School in 1961.

By 1860 economic activeness in the region was based on dairy farms along Hooper and Farm-to-Market Roads, second-growth logging, and the barns depot.

The region was best known from the 1850s to the early 1900s for the Carmel Grove Campgrounds positioned about half a mile north of the depot on the east side of Hooper Road, near the intersection of what is now Country Club Road.

This created a demand for housing which quickly converted Endwell from a hamlet at the intersection of Hooper Road and State Route 17 - C into the large residentiary region it is today.

The region north of Watson Boulevard was advanced during the 1940s and 1950s, and the region east of Hooper Road amid the 1950s and 1960s.

This growth, along with similar expansion in the town of Maine to the immediate north, led to the creation of a new Maine-Endwell Central School District and the opening of Maine-Endwell Central High School in 1961.

This school is now the center of the community, inheriting its part from Hooper School and the initial Hooper barns depot.

The school was the 2008 New York State Class A High School baseball champions.

Endwell is also home to two well-known small-town golf courses, Endwell Greens and the Binghamton Country Club.

Endwell is the home of the 2007 New York State Little League Champions.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the hamlet has a total region of 3.8 square miles (9.8 km2), of which 3.7 square miles (9.7 km2) is territory and 0.039 square miles (0.1 km2), or 0.85%, is water. New York State Route 17 and New York State Route 17 - C are east-west highways passing through the community.

Municipalities and communities of Broome County, New York, United States

Categories:
Census-designated places in New York - Hamlets in New York - Binghamton urbane region - Census-designated places in Broome County, New York - Hamlets in Broome County, New York - Logging communities in the United States