History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Wyoming Still Uses the Gaslight Village Story
Wyoming's village identity turns on early natural gas, gas streetlights, Oatka Creek country, and a historic district.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified July 4, 2026
Wyoming’s nickname is not just a bit of village branding. Newell’s Settlement was founded in 1809, renamed Wyoming in 1829, and incorporated in 1916. The village was also one of the early places where natural gas was developed, and the field still provides gas for village streetlights and some homes.
That makes “Gaslight Village” feel wonderfully literal. A visitor can hear the nickname, then look around and understand that it came from a real local resource, not a marketing committee. The gas field was never a huge producer, but it was enough to become part of public life.
The setting adds another layer. Middlebury is a rural Wyoming County town between Buffalo and Rochester, with Oatka Creek along the east side and Dale Valley to the west. The Village of Wyoming also has several buildings on the National Register of Historic Places and hosts the AppleUmpkin Festival each fall.
Route 19 gives the village a main-road spine, but the surrounding town still reads rural. Large dairy farms, locally grown grain, fruits, vegetables, and maple syrup fill out the picture. The gaslight story sits inside farm country, creek country, and a valley landscape.
The AppleUmpkin Festival adds the public gathering piece. A fall festival with a name like that is hard to forget, and it fits the place better than a polished slogan would. It sounds homemade in the right way: apples, pumpkins, main-street traffic, craft tables, food smells, and people bumping into neighbors they meant to call weeks ago.
So Wyoming’s story has a nice mix of things you can picture: settlement names, old gaslights, a historic district, Oatka Creek, Dale Valley, dairy farms, maple syrup, and a fall festival with a name people remember.
That is enough to make the village stick. Wyoming feels small in the best local way: not plain, just compact, with its history glowing a little after dark.