New York Porch

History & Culture · Southern Tier

Canisteo's Living Sign Turns a Name Into a Landscape

Canisteo's hillside Living Sign gives the town a rare local landmark planted in Scotch pine and school stewardship.

Published June 29, 2026 · Last verified June 29, 2026

Canisteo’s most legible landmark is alive, and that is not a figure of speech. The hillside Living Sign measures 60 by 400 feet. It was planted in 1934, spells the village name in Scotch pine trees, is visible from Greenwood Street near the elementary school, and joined the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.

That gives the town a landmark most places cannot borrow. Canisteo has a railroad-era village story, an older river settlement called Canisteo Center, and one of Steuben County’s original town names. Still, the sign is the local memory people can point to from the road. The view is practical too, because it tells you exactly where the village name lives.

The best part is the maintenance story. The local school community keeps the sign visible, so the landmark is not just a relic on a hillside. Canisteo’s identity lives in more than dates or boundary changes. It is in a big planted word, cared for locally, making the town name part of the landscape instead of just the map.

That gives the village a landmark with roots, needles, and local hands behind it.

Filed under: History & Culture Canisteo Steuben County canisteoliving-signscotch-pinenational-registersteuben-county

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June 29, 2026

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