History & Culture · Western New York
Albion's Square Tells a Canal-and-Sandstone Story
Albion's Courthouse Square links county government, Medina sandstone buildings, Erie Canal growth, and a compact historic village core.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Albion’s story is concentrated around Courthouse Square. Orleans County Tourism says the area includes distinctive public buildings, houses, and sacred spaces, including Gothic Revival churches built with locally quarried Medina sandstone. It also says Albion’s roots trace to the Erie Canal’s 1821 arrival, which helped make the village a trading and political center.
The Orleans County government page broadens the canal piece, noting that the Erie Canal was built in 1825 and now functions as a linear park with paddling and a hard-surfaced Canalway Trail through three villages. In Albion, those facts land on the ground: county buildings, sandstone, a canal village memory, and a square that still gives Orleans County a civic address.
A resident may know the square by habit, but a visitor can use it as a map key. The buildings give the village center a more formal feel than a quick drive-through might suggest. The canal gives the growth story a route, and the sandstone gives the civic buildings a material you can actually notice.
It is a good walking-around note, too. Start near the square, look for the stone, then remember that the canal was not just scenery; it was the route that helped turn Albion into a county-seat village with a public center.