History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Dansville Carries a Health-Resort and Valley-Town Memory
Dansville's identity includes valley roads, older health-resort history, and a village center at Livingston County's south edge.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Dansville has a hillside story hiding behind the highway view.
The Dansville Chamber says the community gained national prominence in 1858, when the Jackson family of physicians began a water-cure enterprise called Our Home on the Hillside. The same history says the resort drew figures such as Frederick Douglass and Susan B. Anthony, burned in June 1882, and reopened as the larger Jackson Sanatorium in October 1883.
That gives Dansville a softer and stranger memory than a simple valley-town label. People came here for air, water, hillside views, treatment, and the promise of health. Downtown streets and older buildings feel different when that wellness chapter is part of the picture.
The fire-and-rebuild detail gives the story drama without needing to overstate it. A health resort rose, burned, and came back in brick on the hillside.
The village still sits at Livingston County’s southern edge, with Route 36 and I-390 nearby. But the older story keeps it from feeling like just a pass-through.
Dansville’s charm is the mix: valley roads, hillside drama, health-resort memory, and a village center that feels older than the highway.