Cayuga Lake State Park
Nature & Parks· The Finger Lakes

Cayuga Lake State Park

Good forOutdoor lovers

Cayuga Lake — named for the Cayuga people, who called themselves the People of the Great Swamp and fished these waters long before a state park bore their name — runs nearly 39 miles through central New York, one of the deepest glacially carved lakes on the continent. The park sits on the north end, 188 acres of flat lakeshore rising gently to campsites and cabins, with a swimming beach, boat launch, and fishing access where largemouth bass, northern pike, and lake trout hold in the deeper water. Come for the campsite; stay for the lake itself.

Quick facts
  • ·The Cayuga Indian village of Skoi-Yase was established about the year 1500, located near the rapids of the Seneca River, near present-day Locust Street in Waterloo, NY — confirmed directly from the HMDB historical marker page (hmdb.org/m.asp?m=8192, 'Regarding Skoi-Yase' annotation).
  • ·Per the same HMDB marker, the Cayuga valued Skoi-Yase because the name means 'flowing water,' and because of the abundant supply of fish, especially eels, in the Seneca River — note this is a different translation and framing than 'the place of the eel taking' and makes no mention of salmon.
  • ·Archaeologist Jack Rossen of Ithaca College has worked, since 2000, on about ten major sites dating from the tenth to the eighteenth century within the former territory of the Cayuga Nation on the east side of Cayuga Lake — confirmed directly from the full text of the Ithaca.com article (ithaca.com, 'Archeology Helps Tell The Story Of The Cayuga Nation,' by Clara MacCarald, Sep 8, 2014).
  • ·The same Ithaca.com article confirms the Cayuga were engaged in hunting, trapping, snaring, and fishing, alongside farming — but this article contains NO mention of fishnet sinkers or any specific fishing equipment/artifacts; that detail is not supported by this source.
  • ·Skoi-Yase's location (Waterloo, NY, near the Seneca River rapids, a few miles from Cayuga Lake's outlet) is, per the confirmed HMDB source, distinct from the current Cayuga Lake State Park boundary — supporting the scoping note that this is regional/watershed context rather than an on-site park fact.

More archive

5 historical photographs.
Cayuga Lake State Park — historical photo
Cayuga Lake State Park — historical photo
Cayuga Lake State Park — historical photo
Cayuga Lake State Park — historical photo
Cayuga Lake State Park — historical photo

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Editorial content compiled with AI assistance. Place details verified against public records.