Description
West Seneca’s history as a working community will also be seen in its humble Native American cabins, sturdy Ebenezer Society buildings, simple farms, hardscrabble shops, and blue-collar housing tracts. Within the 1700s, the Seneca Indians became essentially the most dominant tribe when the town used to be a part of the Buffalo Creek Reservation. Within the 1840s, the arrival of the Ebenezer religious community from Germany continued the area’s most commonly agricultural development, they usually formally incorporated the town in 1851. Their departure Within the 1860s led to the arrival of more immigrants, primarily farmers, laborers, and shopkeepers. The following 100 years in West Seneca saw its development continue. Within the 1950s, a further influx of new residents in search of reasonably priced homes in a suburban setting led to the town’s rapid growth as a mecca for working people.