History & Culture · Central New York
Throop Was Pieced Together From Three Older Towns
Throop's 1859 formation story explains why this Cayuga County town feels stitched from older neighbors near Auburn.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Throop has a good origin story because it was not born as one tidy block. The area was part of Cayuga hunting grounds, then part of the Central New York Military Tract. Later, early settlement formed nearby towns such as Aurelius, Mentz, and Sennett.
In 1859, pieces of those three towns were split off to make the Town of Throop. The new town was named for former governor Enos T. Throop. That gives the place a stitched-together feeling that still makes sense on the map. Throop shares its southeast border with Auburn, but its civic story points back through several older neighbors.
So Throop is not just a name north of Owasco Lake country or beside Auburn errands. It is a small Cayuga County town made from edges: older town lines, military-tract land, Cayuga history, and a governor’s name folded into local government.
A place like that rewards a slower look. The story is not loud, but it explains why town borders can feel less like a single downtown center and more like a set of old lines across roads, fields, and family maps.