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Past Updates
Land of opportunity in Orleans County
backyards
Lack of economic opportunity within Orleans
County is often cited for the eagerness of people to leave. But what
accounts for the affection many residents have for Orleans County as
well as the fairly steady stream of new residents?
Having done door-to-door campaigning around
Orleans County, I have come into contact with many who are relatively
new to the area and others, including an M.I.T. professor, who spend
their summers here. When asked why he moved here, one younger husband
and father said simply, “Look around!” His family lives on the north
side of Ridge Road in Gaines! A woman from Trenton, N.J. came here to
raise dogs after searching Pennsylvania and Virginia long and hard.
Sounding as though she had just passed the “Pearly Gates,” she raved
last fall about the six-acre property she had found here.
A variety of things seem to account for
significant numbers of new arrivals. Among the more frequently
mentioned is the physical environment including open space and the water
resource base. How many places within an hour of good shopping
opportunities lack strip malls? The former head of the Jamestown
Audubon Society, Bruce Robinson—who spent last summer in Southern Africa
and a month of 2006 in Queensland, Australia listing parrots—has raved
to me about the variety of bird life here, asserting, for example, that
Orleans County is the most dependable location in Western New York for
finding yellow billed and black billed cuckoos. Just as a tremendous
assortment of wildlife may be found here, a surprising variety of plant
life—including white dogwood—is found along the Lake Plain that normally
isn’t found 150 miles south of here. Fruits are grown such as berries,
apples and peaches as good as may be found anywhere. There are
certainly local wildlife assets some would rather no one found out
about.
Talking to people new to the area, the cost of
property—a downside for long-time residents looking to move—is a major
plus. Properties selling for $300 to $500 thousand elsewhere often
bring a third of that here.
For those who do additional research, other
things we often overlook become apparent. The significance of this area
in history, especially the history of various reform movements, is
striking. Historic efforts to improve American society were important
parts of the history of Ontario Lake Shore Counties such as Orleans.
Susan B. Anthony, synonymous with women’s rights, lived and worked in
Rochester as did her friend and colleague Frederick Douglass, arguably
the person most closely associated with the abolition of slavery.
Douglass was chased, shot at and took refuge in the home of a stranger,
in Irondequoit. W.E.B. du Bois’ movement for full and immediate
equality for African Americans—including the NAACP—is associated with
Niagara Falls. The Society of Friends, or Quakers, who were among the
earliest abolitionists, as well as Unitarian Universalists, had a
significant presence here.
There were others as well—though ultimately less
successful—such as the temperance movement. Growing up in Kendall, I
was aware of one of the last chapters of the Women’s Christian
Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.) in New York State. During the Civil War,
the 28th Western New York Volunteer Regiment in the Union
Army had a very active chapter of The Sons of Temperance. Its officers
included young men from Medina, including Hugh Dunham. A schism in the
Methodist Church over slavery resulted in the establishment of the still
flourishing Free Methodist Church in Orleans County.
Many homes, churches, commercial and government
buildings with architectural, as well as historical, significance
remain, though perhaps hundreds have been lost. These include Medina
sandstone, cobblestone, Greek Revival and Victorian homes and scattered,
often distinctive, 19th century barns. Appealing examples of
such architecture may be found in all the county’s villages.
There are people who flatly state that they are
sold on Orleans County living because of the quality of the public
schools.
People here enjoy the upside of proximity to
Rochester and Buffalo, without the commercialization, congestion and
violent crime. These urban centers offer accessible cultural activity,
professional sports and some of the best medical treatment facilities in
the world within an hour of quiet rural homes.
All things considered—especially taking into
account our caring, generous, hard-working people—Orleans County is, in
effect, a tranquil island in a sea of turmoil.
Gary F. Kent
Legislator – At Large (Central) |