ABOUT us
About the Endicott History & Heritage Center
The Endicott History and Heritage Center, managed by the Old Village of Union Historical Society, houses extensive displays covering the histories of both EJ and IBM. The amazing stories of these two companies, told with displays of hundreds of artifacts, help define how such a small village in upstate central New York became the hometown for two international giants of industry.


The IBM museum, originally created by IBM for its employees, is now available for all to see and enjoy. The EJ material, a broad collection of never-before-seen EJ items, is the result of many donations from a number of local collectors.
About the Old Union Village Historical Society
The Endicott History and Heritage Center, managed by the Old Village of Union Historical Society, houses extensive displays covering the histories of both EJ and IBM. The amazing stories of these two companies, told with displays of hundreds of artifacts, help define how such a small village in upstate central New York became the hometown for two international giants of industry.

How Union Got Its Name
The name for the Town of Union and the Village of Union originated from a 1779 military excursion ordered by George Washington. In upstate New York and northern Pennsylvania areas Iroquois native-Americans had been joining forces to help the British in attacks against Americans. Fearing this would continue, George Washington ordered a campaign that would travel along the Susquehanna River and engage the Six Nations of Iroquois.
Major General John Sullivan would start from Easton, PA and travel up the Susquehanna River with about 3,500 soldiers. General James Clinton would start from Otsego Lake with about 1,500 soldiers and 220 boats and march or float down river. They planned to meet at Tioga Point (Owego area).
Water flowing out of Otsego Lake becomes the Susquehanna River (site of Cooperstown, NY) and resembles a typical unnavigable creek. Clinton’s soldiers built a dam to hold back the waterflow from the lake for five weeks. On August 8, 1779, he blew up the dam, and his boats floated downstream on the man-made flood (or “wave”).
Poor met Clinton in the general area now called the Union business district. People commonly referred to their meeting as the “union” of their forces. In 1791, when the Town of Union was formed, its name memorialized this locally famous event. Eighty years later, in 1871, the same name was chosen when the Village of Union was incorporated.
Here’s What Others Are Saying About Us
– Old Village of Union Historical Society Receives $100K Grant
– Trip Advisor Reviews
– Ed Thelen’s review of the Endicott History & Heritage Center
– Binghamton Press Article