History & Culture · Western New York
Hanover Meets Lake Erie and Silver Creek
Hanover's identity stretches from Silver Creek and Lake Erie to farms, manufacturing, grape-season events, boat launches, and Sunset Bay.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Hanover’s story is wide because the town is not just one settlement. Town records say it lies along Lake Erie about 30 miles southwest of Buffalo and encompasses the Village of Silver Creek plus Forestville, Irving, Hanford Bay, Sunset Bay, and Smith Mills.
Its own about page also points to working farms, manufacturing plants, Chautauqua Wine Country, the Festival of Grapes, a boat launch and fish-cleaning station, and a busy waterfront around Sunset Bay. Silver Creek’s village site adds the old-lake-village note, describing roots dating back to 1803, early lake port days, and a unique skew arch railroad bridge.
Hanover therefore reads as a lake-edge town with multiple doors: beach and launch, creek and rail, grape-season gathering, farms, shops, and hamlets that each carry part of the local map.
Silver Creek, Lake Erie, Sunset Bay, Forestville, and the Festival of Grapes give Hanover a lively Chautauqua County feel. It is lake town, farm town, and village network all at once.
That variety is the point. A person might come through for a boat launch, a grape-season event, a village errand, or a lakeshore weekend and still be reading the same town.