The Camillus Erie Canal Park would not be where it is without dedicated volunteers like Dave and Liz Beebe.
The Beebes and volunteers have consistently found new ways to attract visitors. In the early 1990s, the park offered dinner cruises with prime rib steaks. Then the park created the annual Towpath Day, which features locals dressed in 1800s-era costumes, boat tours and a host of family activities.
“The way to get people to the Canal was to invite them down,” Liz Beebe said.
Since opening half a century ago, the 420-acre site along the Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor has found a faithful army of supporters invested in restoring and preserving a notable part of New York’s history.
At the forefront of this effort are the Beebes, who were part of a local committee that recommended the Town of Camillus buy the 164 acres that became the initial park a mile north of the main village in 1972.
“People will say, ‘You were the leaders, and it wouldn’t have happened without you,’” Liz Beebe said. “But you can’t do anything by yourself. The volunteers are so much of the maintenance, and their spirit and enthusiasm really has made the park.”