This is the current conditions weather report for Endicott. The report was made 74 minutes ago, at 10:56 UTC. The wind was blowing at a speed of 15 miles per hour / 24.1 kilometers per hour from the south (170°). The temperature was 82°F / 28°C, with a dew-point at 82°F / 28°C. The atmospheric pressure was 29.91 inHg / 1014 hPa. The relative humidity was 35%. The skies were clear.
Endicott is a village in Broome County, New York, USA. The population was 13,038 at the 2000 census. The village is named after Henry B. Endicott, a founding member of the Endicott Johnson Corporation shoe manufacturing company, who founded the community as the "'Home of the Square Deal'".
The Village of Endicott is in the Town of Union and is west of Binghamton, New York. The town is served by the Greater Binghamton Airport/Edwin A Link Field. It is part of the "Triple Cities", along with Binghamton and Johnson City.
Part of Endicott was originally incorporated as "Union Village" in 1892, but Endicott Village was consolidated with Union and named Endicott in 1921.
The "Tri-Cities College" of Syracuse University was started in Endicott, it later moved to Town of Vestal and later became Harpur College and now Binghamton University.
Endicott is known as the birthplace of computers, because the company that became IBM was established there in 1906. The county-run EnJoie Golf Course in Endicott was home of the PGA Tour's B.C. Open. The tournament ended its 30+ year run on the PGA in July of 2006. In July of 2007, Endicott will host the first Dick's Sporting Goods Open a Champions Tour stop.
Endicott is also the birthplace of baseball's four-time All-Star, Johnny Logan.
Greater Binghamton, which includes Endicott, is known as the Carousel Capital of the World. This is because George F. Johnson wanted carousels to be free of admission, so he built six of them around the area, and all of them are free of charge.
Endicott is the birthplace of Johnny Hart, creator of the comic strip "B.C." (thus the BC Open) and co-creator of "The Wizard Of Id", and radical feminist and professor Camille Paglia.