History & Culture · Mohawk Valley
Lee's Old High Ground Was Dairy Country Before It Was Rome's Rural Edge
Lee's historical gazetteer material frames the town through 1790s settlement, varied soils, upland dairy farms, and hamlets northwest of Rome.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Lee is easy to miss if you see it mostly as the rural land northwest of Rome. A historical account on Oneida NYGenWeb says the Town of Lee was settled about 1794 by families including Taft, Story, White, Lany, Eams, Young, Castle, Clark, Harger, Comstock, and Williams. It also describes a varied farm landscape: rich gravelly soil in the southeast, lighter sandy land in the southwest, and high northern ground especially fitted for dairy.
That old description presents Lee as a working upland town of hamlets and farms. The town’s identity sits in soils, cows, road-corner settlements, and the long pull of Oneida County agriculture around Rome.
The soil-and-dairy detail gives Lee a practical local shape. The town’s high ground, farm roads, and settlement names belong together because the land itself helped decide how people worked it.
Lee can look quiet on a regional map, especially beside Rome. But the older account shows a town with its own agricultural logic: families moving in, land being tested, soils shaping use, and dairy farms giving the uplands a reason to matter. It is a small story, but it gives the roads and fields a real local memory.