History & Culture · Southern Tier
Addison's River Story Runs Through Its Floodworks
Addison's DEC floodworks record shows how the Canisteo River and Tuscarora Creek shaped the village and town.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Addison wears its river engineering in plain sight. The state DEC flood-damage-reduction record places the project in the Town of Addison at the meeting of the Canisteo River and Tuscarora Creek. That confluence is not just a map fact. It explains why water has had such a strong say in the village’s built shape.
The project includes earth levees and a concrete floodwall along the Canisteo River, plus levees along both sides of Tuscarora Creek. Those are big, ordinary-looking pieces of public works: grassy banks, wall sections, drainage structures, and creek edges that do their work quietly most days.
The backstory is worth knowing. After the July 1935 flood, the village built a wall and incomplete levees. The main project, which incorporated that local protection, was built from August 1946 to December 1947. New York later made additional improvements in 1950, including work near the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad bridge area on Tuscarora Creek.
That history does not make Addison a place to fear. It makes Addison a place to read with the water in mind. The river and creek helped shape where protection went, where roads and rails made sense, and why a small Southern Tier village has floodworks as part of its everyday landscape.