History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Benton's Crossroads, Lake Edge, and Good Soils Explain the Town
Benton's story comes from Seneca Lake, Benton Center's crossroads, Kashong Creek power, and long-running farm soils.
Published June 29, 2026 · Last verified June 29, 2026
Benton’s own history gives the town a Finger Lakes shape you can actually picture. Seneca Lake forms the eastern border, while the original settlement was plotted at a crossroads near the geographic center of town and named Benton Center. Lake edge on one side, practical crossroads in the middle.
The ground between them carries the rest of the story. Benton identifies farming and agricultural businesses as long-running pieces of local life, with excellent soils supporting cropland, orchards, vineyards, and pastureland. Early development also included brick-making, fruit farming, and flour and wood milling powered by Kashong Creek.
That makes Benton a farm-and-water township where useful land mattered. Fields, Route 14A, lake roads, creek power, and old schoolhouse references are pieces of the same pattern. The place does not need a single village scene to make sense.
Benton is quiet, but it is not vague. Lake edge, creek work, rich soil, and crossroads settlement give the town a practical Finger Lakes identity that sticks. The story works because the geography and the work line up: water, soil, roads, and mills all point to a town built from useful ground.