The area was long occupied by the
Seneca tribe, which had established a major village of
Kanadaseaga here by 1687. The British helped fortify the village against the French of Canada during the
Seven Years' War (locally known as the
French and Indian War); later they added defensive fortifications against the Americans during the
Revolutionary War. During the latter warfare, the punitive
Sullivan Expedition of 1779 mounted by rebel forces destroyed many of the dwellings, as well as the winter stores of the people, and they abandoned the ruins. Following the war and the forced removal of the Seneca from their native land,
European-Americans settled here about 1793. They developed a town encouraged by the
Pulteney Association, which owned the land and was selling plots. At the end of the Revolutionary War, Lt. Col. Seth Reed (né Read), who had fought at Bunker Hill, was one of many pioneers who moved from Massachusetts into Ontario County. By trade with the Seneca, he bought a tract of land eighteen miles in extent. This occurred in 1787, while his wife Hannah stayed in
Uxbridge, Massachusetts with their family. (This was before the first Trade and Intercourse Act (or Nonintercourse Act) was passed in 1790, formally declaring that land sales to individuals were invalid unless they occurred during a public treaty held under the authority of the United States.) "
Seth Read moved his wife Hannah and their family to Geneva,
Ontario County, New York in the winter of 1790". The settlement at Geneva was not yet permanent; the European Americans continued to harass the Seneca on the frontier. In 1795 Read and his family removed to
Erie, Pennsylvania, where they became its earliest European-American settlers. The "Village of Geneva" was incorporated in 1806, formally separating it from the surrounding area of Geneva Town. Later the village became a city through a 1871 charter. In the 1830s, a government surveyor named John Brink named both
Geneva Lake and
Lake Geneva in Wisconsin after Geneva, New York.
Geneva, Nebraska, founded in 1871, is considered to have been named after the one in New York, rather than directly for the Swiss city. ==Geography==