History & Culture · Mohawk Valley
Westmoreland Keeps a Patent, Farm, and Iron-Ore Memory
Westmoreland's town story runs through Dean's Patent, early farms, red iron ore, and a 1792 split from Whitestown.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Westmoreland’s local identity is not just a name on the Thruway edge. The town history says Westmoreland was the fourth town settled in the area that became Oneida County, with Dean’s Patent on the western line as an early settlement area.
It says James Dean built the early plank house in Oneida County in 1791 and that the town was set off from Whitestown in 1792. The same page also notes red iron ore in the southwest area, used at Hecla and Clinton furnaces.
The historical society’s collections page adds that local records and artifacts still document that town history. Westmoreland reads as farm country with an early-patent and early-industry backbone.
Dean’s Patent gives Westmoreland a better frame than a quick highway map. Early farms, a 1791 plank house, a 1792 town split, red iron ore, and furnace work all point to a place with more backbone than its quiet fields suggest.
The historical society collections matter because they keep that memory local. Westmoreland’s story is not just old settlement; it is settlement, farming, iron ore, and local record-keeping in one Oneida County town. The quiet fields make more sense when you know there was once ore, patent land, and furnace work in the background.