History & Culture · Western New York
Medina Is Cut from Sandstone and Canal Trade
Medina's identity is built from Erie Canal movement, Orleans County quarries, red-brown sandstone buildings, lift-bridge country, and a durable preservation story.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Medina has a story you can read in the stone. Medina sandstone formed hundreds of millions of years ago, but it became a village identity around Erie Canal digging in the 1820s, when quarrying and shipping turned local rock into a wider building trade.
The stone traveled far. Orleans County Tourism and the Medina Sandstone Society connect it to places such as the Brooklyn Bridge, New York State Capitol, churches, homes, public buildings, and old cobblestone streets. That gives Medina an unusual kind of local pride: the village’s geology left town and still shows up elsewhere.
The local version is still the most satisfying. Medina is canal trade, quarry labor, red-brown building stone, lift-bridge streets, and ordinary village life stacked on top of the same geology.
The preservation side keeps the stone from becoming a dead industry story. The Medina Sandstone Society was founded in 2004, created a Hall of Fame in 2013, marks sites with engraved sandstone tablets, and points to the 1903 Medina Armory as another local sandstone landmark.
Once you know the sandstone story, Medina’s buildings start to talk back a little. A wall, curb, bridge approach, or old commercial block can feel like part of a bigger Orleans County quarry-and-canal landscape, with the downtown sitting on the same story as the quarries.