History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Lyons' Peppermint Story Is Different from Its Courthouse-and-Canal Role
Beyond the county-seat and Erie Canal story, Lyons has a peppermint-oil identity preserved by the Lyons Heritage Society and Hotchkiss museum.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Lyons already has a courthouse and canal identity, but peppermint gives the town a different scent, almost literally. The town was set off on March 1, 1811, and the village incorporated in 1854. That puts Lyons squarely in the old Wayne County and Erie Canal story. The H. G. Hotchkiss Essential Oil Museum adds a smaller, sharper chapter.
The Lyons Heritage Society keeps the Hotchkiss peppermint story in public view. Hiram and Leman Hotchkiss relocated from Phelps to a Lyons building along the original Erie Canal, and the museum holds pieces of the peppermint-oil process. That ties farm fields, processing, family business, canal movement, and export identity into one local thread.
Peppermint is a good reminder that industry did not always look like smokestacks. Sometimes it looked like mint crops, stills, bottles, labels, and canal shipping. Lyons could be a county-seat town and a canal town while also becoming known for a crop that traveled far beyond Wayne County.
The museum keeps that story from fading into a cute nickname. It gives Lyons a memorable old business line, one with enough flavor to make the town stick in your head after the courthouse and canal have already done their work.