Office
of the County Historian
The town of Macedon was created from the
town of Palmyra on January 29, 1823. Macedon has an area just over
23,000 acres with a gently rolling, irregular surface. It is located
in the extreme southwest corner of Wayne County.
Macedon's first settlers, Webb and Hannah Harwood, arrived in what
is now Macedon in the late spring of 1789, after a forty-six day
journey from Adams, Massachusetts in an uncovered wagon drawn by
a team of oxen.
The Erie Canal was an important factor in the settlement and growth
of Macedon. Its two ports on the canal were Wayneport, formerly
called West Macedon, and the village of Macedon itself. Today, Lock
#30 of the Barge Canal System is located just off Route 350. Here
visitors can view an operating lock.
Education was important to the early residents of Macedon. The
Macedon Academy was well known throughout the area for its exemplary
standard of higher education. Founded in 1841, the Academy was designed
as an intermediate level of education, between the district school
and college. The Academy adhered to very strict doctrines, and for
more than fifty years had a great influence in guiding the morals
and the higher education of young men and women in the area.
Today, Macedon is a growing community with an increase of almost
eighteen percent in population from 7,375 in 1990 to 8,688 in 2000. - Private home.
- Private home.
- Built in 1854,
the academy was a prestigious, private intermediate school for young
ladies and gentlemen until 1902. Local artifacts from the town of
Macedon on display. Open by appointment.
(315) 986-5694
Macedon Academy. Built in 1854 and
continued as a private
school until 1902.
(* Listed on New York State and National Registers of Historical
Places)