History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Ithaca's Town Story Climbs Above the City
The Town of Ithaca frames the city from Cayuga Lake hills, Cornell and Ithaca College edges, natural areas, and surrounding neighborhoods.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
The Town of Ithaca frames the city from the hills around Cayuga Lake. Town materials describe a place at the southern tip of Cayuga Lake, home to Cornell University and Ithaca College, with rural, suburban, and urban landscapes surrounding the City of Ithaca. Cornell’s own Ithaca page reinforces the setting at the south end of Cayuga Lake, with gorges, state parks, and waterfront in the local landscape.
Tompkins County history adds the longer regional context of Cayuga homeland before European settlement. The town comes across as hillside, campus edge, lake basin, and neighborhood frame around a city that often gets the headline.
That helps separate the town from the city without pulling them apart. Ithaca is campus, gorge, lake, neighborhood, and rural edge all at once, and the town is where many of those edges become everyday life.
The Cayuga homeland context also keeps the college landscape from becoming the whole story. Cornell and Ithaca College matter, of course, but so do the lake basin, old settlement history, hillsides, parks, and the neighborhoods around the city.