History & Culture · Western New York
Holley's Canal Story Runs Through Public Square
Holley ties its Erie Canal origin to Public Square, Canal Park, a lift bridge, and trails down to the village waterfall.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Holley is a canal village with its front door still pointed toward the water. Village records say it owes its existence to the Erie Canal and was named for canal commissioner Myron Holley after early settlement in 1812.
Orleans County Tourism fills in the walkable texture: the Erie Canal port is listed at 72 Public Square, with boaters met by a boardwalk, playground, gazebo, and nature trails leading toward the waterfall and village square. Canal Park adds docks, restrooms, picnic tables, shelter, playground space, hiking, and Friday night summer canal concerts.
That gives Holley an unusually compact identity. Public Square, East Avenue, the canal embankment, and the waterfall trail all sit close enough that a visitor can understand the village by walking one loop instead of reading a plaque.
The Erie Canal, Public Square, and waterfall make a tidy little triangle. Boaters, walkers, families, and people heading to the square can all read the village through the same short loop.
That is what makes Holley feel lived in rather than staged. The canal is more than history here; it is still part of the park, the trail, the concerts, and the way the village greets people.