History & Culture · Central New York
Lenox Carries Canastota, Wampsville, and Canal Memory
Lenox's identity is a Madison County crossroads: Canastota, Wampsville, Oneida Lake edges, and old Erie Canal memory all sit inside the town.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Lenox is a town where a lot of Madison County’s working map stacks up. The town’s About page says Lenox was carved from Sullivan, established on March 3, 1809, and situated in the north central part of Madison County. It also says the town was named after Lenox Township in western Massachusetts.
Canastota gives Lenox its most visible village cue. The village page places Canastota within Lenox and points to the historic Old Erie Canal, the International Boxing Hall of Fame, the Canastota Central School District, local businesses, and local organizations. That is a pretty full civic pocket for one town.
Wampsville and the canal memory add more texture nearby, while lakeward roads and the Route 5/I-90 corridor keep the town tied to movement across Central New York.
Lenox is not just a town-government label. It is canal memory, school district life, boxing history, village errands, county paperwork, and road movement stacked into one north-central Madison County town.
That mix is what makes the place easier to remember. Canastota gives the town a front porch, the canal gives it a past, and the corridor keeps people moving through.