New York Porch

History & Culture · Central New York

Taylor Valley Keeps the Cheningo CCC Story on the Landscape

Taylor Valley State Forest connects Cuyler, Solon, Taylor, and Truxton with Cheningo day use, snowmobile trails, glacial landforms, and CCC history.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 27, 2026

Taylor Valley State Forest gives several Cortland County hill towns a shared piece of public ground. The forest stretches across Cuyler, Solon, Taylor, and Truxton, with Cheningo Day Use Area on the property and miles of Finger Lakes Trail crossing through. Instead of four separate place names sitting apart on the map, the forest gives the area a common outdoor spine.

The deeper story is layered into the land. The valley was shaped by glacial movement, then later folded into New York’s reforestation work after worn-out farm use. During the 1930s, Civilian Conservation Corps workers planted seedlings on former agricultural land, and Truxton CCC Camp S-118 stood where the Cheningo Day Use Area is now.

That makes Taylor Valley more than an amenities list. A hiker, hunter, snowmobiler, birder, or family stopping for a picnic is moving through ice-shaped valley, former farm ground, public forest, and New Deal work at the same time. Cheningo is the name to keep in mind. It gives the forest a local doorway and keeps the CCC story tied to ground people can still visit.

Filed under: History & Culture Cuyler Cortland County taylor-valleycheningocivilian-conservation-corpsstate-foreststory

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Last reviewed
June 27, 2026

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