History & Culture · Central New York
Volney's Name Change Shows Oswego County Taking Shape
Volney's local story follows Fredericksburgh, George Scriba's land world, Oswego County formation, and towns splitting off around it.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Volney’s color is a town-formation story with several name changes and slices. The town historian page traces Volney through the Roosevelt Purchase and Scriba’s Patent world, noting that it was once called Fredericksburg and was renamed Volney in 1811. Visit Oswego County’s Volney Historian page gives the same simple anchor: Volney formed from Mexico in 1806, originally as Fredericksburgh, with the name changed in 1811.
Volney is a good town for understanding how Oswego County took shape. Its present map is the result of older patents, county creation, and neighboring towns being carved away.
Fredericksburgh is the detail that makes the old map feel alive. The name change, the 1806 formation from Mexico, the 1811 rename, and the Scriba land world all point to a county that was still being sorted into towns. Volney’s story is quiet, but it helps explain why Oswego County place names can carry so much older paperwork behind them. A town can look simple on a modern map and still carry layers of patents, renames, and boundary changes today north of Syracuse.