New York Porch

History & Culture · Mohawk Valley

Lee's Delta Lake Story Has a Village Under It

Lee's local story includes Delta Lake, a reservoir story, and the memory of a village that disappeared beneath the water.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026

Lee has a lake story with a human underneath. The Village of Delta history says that by 1912 the old village lay under Delta Lake. It includes its streets, trees, hotel, village green, homes, and daily life gone beneath the reservoir.

NYS Parks keeps Delta Lake visible today as a state park landscape. That gives Lee strong color because the lake is not just outdoor scenery. It is a water-management and memory place, where recreation sits over a former village and the map quietly reminds readers that public works can rearrange entire communities.

That gives Delta Lake a different emotional weight. People can swim, camp, fish, and picnic there now, but the water also covers a community that had streets, houses, a hotel, and a green.

That is not a reason to treat the park sadly. It is a reason to treat it with a little more attention. Lee’s lake story is both recreation and memory, and that makes the place more interesting than a plain reservoir label.

A summer day there can still be happy and ordinary. The old village story simply adds depth: under the present lake are names, streets, and lives that belonged to Lee before the water rose.

Filed under: History & Culture Lee Oneida County leedelta-lakemohawk-riveroneida-countylost-village

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Last reviewed
June 24, 2026

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