History & Culture · Western New York
Olean's Little Chicago Story Adds a Prohibition Layer
Olean's history includes a Prohibition-era nickname tied to back-road travel, underworld visitors, and oil-town geography.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Olean gets more interesting when Prohibition enters the story. The city history ties the name Olean to oil, and Adam Hoops imagined the place as a western gateway by way of the Allegheny River. The later “Little Chicago” nickname adds a rougher transportation-route memory.
Olean sat on a back-road route between Chicago and New York City, drew underworld visitors, and became associated with mobsters and Prohibition activity. The point is not to romanticize that period. It is to notice why Olean’s map mattered.
Oil country, river movement, back roads, and a city between larger places gave Olean a different kind of edge. That edge is part of the city’s story even now, tucked behind the friendlier downtown and university-area routines people know today.
The nickname also gives a local history conversation somewhere to start. Ask about “Little Chicago,” and the answer includes transportation, borderland geography, oil-town ambition, crime lore, and the way small cities can collect surprising reputations.
Olean is still a practical western New York city. But the Prohibition layer gives it a story with a little bite, and that makes the place easier to remember.