Artist creates painting for county’s bicentennial, showing log cabin and courthouse from near same spot

By Tom Rivers, Editor Posted 24 February 2025 at 4:07 pm

Photo by Tom Rivers

ALBION – Carol Culhane has created a painting for the Orleans County bicentennial that she says honors the pioneers who tamed the land and lived modestly in log cabins.

In her painting, she shows Main Street in Albion in the 1800s, and has images of a log cabin with livestock, and paintings of the County Courthouse and the Clerks’ Building.

The painting will be featured in a program on April 15 for the county’s 200th anniversary. Orleans was officially recognized on April 15, 1825 by the State Legislature after separating from Genesee County.

Decades before the courthouse (built in 1858) and Clerks’ Building (constructed in 1888) were erected on the Courthouse Square, there was a log cabin there. A historical marker at the courthouse lawn notes the first settlers in Albion in 1811 built a log cabin where the Clerks’ Building stands. The late Al Capurso had that marker installed in 2013 to honor those pioneers – William McAllister and his wife.

Capurso, the former president of Orleans County Historical Association, in 2017 shared his idea with Culhane to have the courthouse and Clerks’ Building in the same painting with a log cabin to honor the pioneers.

Culhane, a member of the Bicentennial Committee, has been thinking about Capurso’s idea and wanted to make it a reality.

She presented the finished painting to the Bicentennial Committee today. She will have it made into prints. Culhane will have 500 of the prints made at 18 inches by 24 inches. They will be available for $10 each with proceeds to go towards celebrating the county’s bicentennial this year.

“I love Orleans County,” said Culhane, a former Gaines town supervisor. “It’s a privilege and an honor to do this.”

She wanted to include the Courthouse Square, a pioneer tribute and include Albion’s historic Main Street.

“One of the things I’ve always admired about Albion is the beauty of the streetscape,” Culhane said.

The bicentennial posters will be numbered from 1 to 500 and Culhane will sign them. She expects the posters to be available in about 10 days. For more information about acquiring one, contact her at (585) 738-3016 or by email, cecjcculhane@gmail.com.