New York Porch

History & Culture · Finger Lakes

Albion's Cemetery Tower Holds County Grief in Stone

Albion's Mount Albion Cemetery gives Orleans County a dramatic Civil War memorial, rural cemetery landscape, and Medina sandstone landmark.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified July 1, 2026

Albion has courthouse-square and canal-town history, but Mount Albion Cemetery adds a hilltop story of its own. Orleans County Tourism describes the cemetery as about 120 acres and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The tower is the part most people remember. It is a 68-foot Soldiers and Sailors Monument, dedicated on July 4, 1876, for 463 people from Orleans County who were killed in the Civil War. The same tourism page says visitors can climb an 84-step spiral staircase.

That makes the cemetery more than a quiet scenic stop. It gathers family records, veterans’ memory, Medina sandstone craft, and a broad view of the county in the same place. For Albion, the hill shows how local pride, grief, and stonework became part of the village landscape.

The place also gives visitors a different way to read Orleans County. Canal villages can feel flat from the road, but the cemetery turns the eye upward. The tower, the stairs, and the sandstone details make local memory feel built into the rise above town.

That upward feeling is part of the story. Albion’s canal and courthouse sides sit below, while the cemetery turns county memory into something visible on the hill.

Filed under: History & Culture Albion Orleans County albionorleans-countymount-albion-cemeterycivil-warmedina-sandstone

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