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Cassadaga, New York

Cassadaga, New York
Village
Cassadaga is located in New York
Cassadaga
Cassadaga
Location within the state of New York
Coordinates: 42°20.5′N 79°17.9′W / 42.3417°N 79.2983°W / 42.3417; -79.2983Coordinates: 42°20.5′N 79°17.9′W / 42.3417°N 79.2983°W / 42.3417; -79.2983
Country United States
State New York
County Chautauqua
Town
Area
 • Total 1.0 sq mi (2.7 km2)
 • Land 0.8 sq mi (2.2 km2)
 • Water 0.2 sq mi (0.6 km2)
Elevation 1,339 ft (408 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 634
 • Density 756/sq mi (291.9/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
ZIP code 14718
Area code(s) 716
FIPS code 36-12749
GNIS feature ID 0945970
Website www.cassadaganewyork.org

Cassadaga is a village in Chautauqua County, New York, United States. The village is located within the northeast corner of the town of , east of the hamlet of , south of and immediately adjacent to Lily Dale in the town of Pomfret, and north of the village of Sinclairville. As of the 2010 census, the population of Cassadaga was 634.

Cassadaga is a Seneca name meaning "water under the rocks", descriptive of the natural springs of the area flowing from glacial moraines. In dry weather, many of the local streams would "disappear", and the spring-fed water runs wholly within the gravelly bottoms of the stream beds draining from the surrounding hills.

Cassadaga was settled by European Americans in 1848 at the headwaters of the technically navigable Cassadaga Creek. Practically, the upper few miles of it are not navigable in the 21st century, due to numerous shallows and beaver activity along its course. Many of the settlers had migrated from New England and eastern New York after the American Revolutionary War. They gradually migrated westward as this territory was opened up for settlement after the Seneca people and other Iroquois League tribes had been forced out of the state after the war.

The village was formally incorporated in 1921.

Early settlers harvested the abundant and large trees (some exceeding 5 feet (1.5 m) in diameter) as a primary source of income. They shipped them downstream to markets via log rafts and flatboats on the creek as timber, charcoal and pearl ash, the latter two products in demand in the early Industrial Age.

The Dunkirk, Allegheny Valley and Pittsburgh Railroad, which laid track from Dunkirk, New York, and eventually to Warren, Pennsylvania, was constructed on the west side of the Cassadaga Lakes in the spring of 1871. It also ran through the then adjoining hamlet of Burnhams, which was later annexed by the village. The railroad contributed greatly to the economy of the area, both as a source of population growth and visitors to the lakes and rolling hills for recreation, and for transportation of the forest and farm products of the area to urban centers.


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