The Cayuga-Seneca Canal is a canal in New York, USA.
Routes 5 and 20 continue on, following the northern edge of the Cayuga-Seneca Canal toward Waterloo.
The Cayuga-Seneca Canal, which connects those two Finger Lakes to the Erie Canal, does not run wide, deep or fast.
The lake is connected at its north end to the Erie Canal via the Cayuga-Seneca Canal.
Fall Street, the main street, runs parallel to the Cayuga-Seneca Canal, and is lined with small-town shops and restaurants, and museums.
A stopping point for canal traffic after the Cayuga-Seneca Canal opened, the village was incorporated in 1837.
While on Washington Street, the route passes over the Cayuga-Seneca Canal and enters the village's center, changing names to Virginia Street in the process.
Take the Bridge Street Bridge, which spans the narrow Cayuga-Seneca Canal.
Antonio Varacalli, an Italian immigrant laborer, jumped off the bridge into the Cayuga-Seneca Canal to save a suicidal young woman he had seen jump.
The Cayuga-Seneca Canal at the north end of the lake connected the system to the Erie Canal.