History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Ira Still Reads Like Military Tract Farm Country
Ira's town story sits inside the old Cato military township, with modern clues in farmland planning, zoning, taxes, and the Cato address locals still use.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Ira is small enough that it can disappear behind nearby names, especially Cato. But the town has a clean old map story if you start with the Military Tract.
Cayuga County’s history page for Victory explains that the original Town of Cato was one of the 28 military townships of the Onondaga Military Tract set up by New York in 1792. Each tract had 100 lots of 600 acres. In 1821, the present towns of Victory, Ira, Conquest, and Cato were created from that original military township.
That origin gives Ira a better frame than “quiet rural town.” The present-day town page still feels land-and-records practical. It links to the zoning ordinance, zoning map, 2026 tentative assessment roll, county and town tax bill lookup, STAR resources, and an Agriculture and Farmland Protection Plan. The municipal building is listed at 2487 West Main Street in Cato.
So Ira reads like farm country with paperwork bones: old tract lines, county-town tax records, zoning maps, and farmland planning sitting behind everyday roads. It is not flashy, and that is the charm. The town makes sense when you imagine land divided, farmed, settled, assessed, and managed one local record at a time.