History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Ledyard has Cayuga Lake on one side and old tract lines underneath
Ledyard's local texture comes from Cayuga Lake, Military Tract roots, Aurora, old roads, and small industries along a rural shore.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Ledyard has an easy-to-miss shape: long, narrow, and tied hard to Cayuga Lake. The town sits in southern Cayuga County on the eastern Cayuga Lake shoreline. It was formed from Scipio on January 30, 1823, and named for General Benjamin Ledyard, an early settler and land agent connected to the Military Tract.
That gives the town two stories at once. One is water: lake shore, Aurora, Long Point, vineyards, farms, and drives where the view opens and closes. The other is paperwork and land: Military Tract lots, old town divisions, and the practical work of turning surveyed land into farms, roads, and hamlets.
Modern Ledyard still has that layered feeling. Aurora sits near the center of town, and the Route 90 corridor carries small industries and local names such as MacKenzie-Childs, Aurora Shoe Factory, Long Point Winery, and Peach Town.
For a mover or visitor, Ledyard is not just a lake-edge pretty place. It is a town where old survey lines, lake geography, a village center, and handmade local businesses all sit close together.