History & Culture · Central New York
Vienna changed names before it settled into Oneida Lake country
Vienna's official about page gives the town a memorable name-change history on Oneida County's western border.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Vienna gives readers a small but memorable New York town-name story. The official about page says the town was formed from Camden on April 3, 1807, was originally called Orange, became Bengal in 1808, and later became Vienna in 1816. That little sequence makes the town feel less static.
It also fits the geography: a western Oneida County community tied to Oneida Lake country, but carrying a paper trail of earlier names. The old Orange-to-Bengal-to-Vienna sequence gives the town a small twist that is easy to remember.
The map opens up a bit when the name changes stay beside the lake-country setting. Vienna gets to be more than a dot north of Rome or west of Camden. It is a western Oneida County town with a paper trail of older names and a shoreline-region identity that still gives the place shape.
That is a modest story, but it is a good one. A town that changed names three times before settling into Vienna already has a little motion in its civic memory.
The Oneida Lake setting keeps that paper trail attached to real geography, not just old minutes.