Colonial Era Kerhonkson was the site of a colonial fort, on Deyo's Hill, that served settler-colonial interests. Before the
Burning of Kingston on October 12, 1777, all the important documents of the nascent
New York state government and government officials were moved to Kerhonkson, remaining for two weeks until they were moved to
Albany, making Kerhonkson briefly the capital of New York.
Canal Era The
Delaware and Hudson Canal was completed in 1828. This opened up local industries such as coal, lumber, dairy, and hotel. Barges towed by mules transported goods along Rondout Creek from Pennsylvania to the Hudson River. In the canal era, Kerhonkson was known as Middleport
Railroad Era The
Delaware and Oswego Railroad was constructed in 1909 along the old canal towpath and a station was constructed along Main Street to ship out dairy products. The Summitville to Kingston segment was acquired by the
New York, Ontario and Western. In the line's waning years, passenger service was reduced to Sunday and holiday service, and summer only. The tracks were pulled up in 1957 once products were being moved by truck upstate. The path is now a popular local hiking and biking destination known as the Rail Trail. It is 3.5 miles long.
Peg Leg Bates In 1951, the famed tap dancer
Peg Leg Bates became the first African-American resort owner in the Catskills when he opened the Peg Leg Bates Country Club in
Palentown, a hamlet in the northern end of the Kerhonkson Zip Code. His wife Alice E. Bates died in 1987, and Bates leased the property to a new owner, Doreen Richardson, in 1989. Part of Route 209 in Ulster County was named “Clayton Peg Leg Bates Memorial Highway” in his honor. Richardson operated the former Peg Leg Bates club as the "Mountain Valley Resort" until her death in 2012. The Peg Leg Bates resort played an important role in the history of the civil rights movement in 1966 when a meeting of the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) held there voted to expel whites from its staff. Rainbow Acres resort was open to African American customers. ==Religion==