History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Dundee's Story Starts at Stark's Mill
Dundee's village identity includes Big Stream, Stark's Mill, incorporation in 1848, hard fires, and a position between Seneca and Keuka Lakes.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Dundee’s story has a mill-town beginning and a very local kind of resilience. The village’s 2025 comprehensive plan says Dundee sits in Yates County between Seneca Lake and Keuka Lake, within the Town of Starkey. That lake-to-lake position matters, but the smaller clue is Big Stream.
The plan’s history section says Isaac Stark settled the area in 1807 and built a mill on Big Stream, giving the early settlement the name Stark’s Mill. That is a good name to keep in your head when you pass through Dundee, because it puts waterpower and daily work before the later village label.
Dundee became an official village in 1848. Then came a hard run of fires in 1859, 1860, and 1861, including 40 buildings lost during the March 1, 1861 fire. That is a lot for a small place to absorb in three years.
Yates County’s hazard-mitigation page adds a broader civic frame: the county plan is about reducing long-term risk from natural and man-made disasters. Dundee becomes a place of water, mills, village rebuilding, and Finger Lakes geography.
The village can feel quiet, but the record behind it has mills, a named stream, serious fires, and the practical geography of being tucked between two Finger Lakes. If you are trying to understand the place, start with water and work, then add the part where a village kept rebuilding.