History & Culture · Western New York
Little Valley became the county seat because the railroad mattered
Little Valley's county-seat story is tied to hills, rail access, old village business, and a name that sits beside Great Valley.
Published July 6, 2026 · Last verified July 6, 2026
Little Valley has a county-seat story with a railroad right in the middle of it. The town formed in 1818 among the hills and valleys of central Cattaraugus County. In 1867, the county seat moved from Ellicottville to Little Valley because the railroad made Little Valley easier to reach for county business.
That one detail makes the village easier to understand. County government did not land there by accident. People needed a place where records, court business, officials, and travelers could meet without turning every trip into a mountain-road chore. By the 1890s, the old village had the kind of busy center that fit that role: stores, churches, a school, a cutlery shop, hotels, an opera house, a courthouse and jail, and other services.
Today, Little Valley can feel quiet, but the bones are not random. The courthouse role, rail memory, county fair, Pat McGee Trail, and old village business all point to a place that once had a very practical reason to be busy. The name is small. The county role is not, even now.