History & Culture · Western New York
Alexander keeps its civic life in a cobblestone school
Alexander's Town Hall began as an 1837 cobblestone school, turning the town's crossroads, education, museum, and civic work into one building.
Published June 29, 2026 · Last verified June 29, 2026
Alexander has the kind of story a small town can carry in one building. The town sits along the south edge of Genesee County, with Tonawanda Creek through the center and the village at the Routes 98 and 20 crossroads. Its early civic map reaches back to the Holland Land Purchase, its 1812 organization from Batavia, and the Alexander Rea name.
Then the story narrows to cobblestone. The present Town Hall was built in 1837 as the Alexander Classical School, so the building started as a place for learning before it became the place people go for town business. That shift keeps the town’s past from feeling sealed off in a museum case. The same frame that once held school life now helps hold daily civic life.
The building has had a busy second act. It was converted into town offices in 1940, housed the fire department for a time, and joined the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. The town museum now sits on the third floor, which gives the building a neat upstairs-downstairs rhythm: errands and local government below, memory and old objects above.
That is a lot of local life for one structure to hold. A schoolhouse can show what a town hoped for. A town hall shows where people still go to settle the ordinary business of living there. A museum shows what the town is trying to remember. In Alexander, those roles did not drift far apart.
Alexander feels readable from the center. Creek, crossroads, old land-company history, school, town hall, firehouse memory, and museum are not scattered into separate stories. A lot of them meet in one cobblestone place. You do not have to know every back road yet. Start at the old schoolhouse town hall and the town begins to introduce itself.