History & Culture · Southern Tier
Campbell’s Town Hall Page Shows a Small Steuben Town in Motion
Campbell's local story comes through in the Cohocton River valley, a Main Street civic doorway, and a survey of old bridges, cemeteries, and buildings.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 27, 2026
Campbell makes more sense when the Cohocton River comes into view before the town boundary does. The town’s comprehensive plan describes a rural, roughly forty-square-mile community in the northern foothills of the Appalachian Mountains.
The river cuts through town, feeds a valley, and leaves much of the developable land in floodplain. That is planning language, but it also tells a plain local story: water shaped the easiest places to build, farm, cross, and worry about.
The civic side comes back to 8529 Main Street. Town-hall hours, board meetings, water reports, budget material, and local notices all sit there as ordinary evidence of a small town doing its work. The landscape is not separate from that routine. River valley, hamlet, farms, roads, and public administration all have to fit the same ground.
The reconnaissance-level survey adds an older layer, with thirty-one historic properties and sites documented across homes, churches, cemeteries, bridges, and other local pieces. That kind of survey makes a small place feel less blurry. The old bridge, the cemetery, the church, and the house all become clues about where people crossed, gathered, buried family, and kept the town going.
Campbell’s story is quiet, but it has shape: a river-cut Steuben County town, a Main Street office, floodplain limits, and older built fragments still helping the place explain itself.