Photo from 1890s shows a much different Kuckville hamlet
By Catherine Cooper, Orleans County Historian
“Illuminating Orleans” – Volume 5, No. 10
KUCKVILLE – A visual puzzle!
The scene shown in this photograph from the late 1890’s does not resemble the Kuckville you are familiar with as you breeze through on Route 18, unaware that you are even crossing a creek, and, unless you are driving north on Lakeside Road, perhaps even unaware of the hamlet.
The barn and bridge shown in the photograph no longer exist, and the area is wooded now, but the bridge abutments are still visible. Writing in 1981, Betsy Hoffman, a former Town of Carlton Historian, explained the changes:
“Prior to 1933, the road now known as Church Street came into the hamlet of Kuckville from the west, continued on to the east across the old bridge with the Kuck estate on the left and Joe Nicholson’s house on the right sitting on what is now the middle of what now is Route 18. The house was moved from that position to where Townsends store is now. The store as we know it in 1981 is part of the old Joe Nicholson house”
Detail of Kuckville from the 1913 Atlas of Niagara and Monroe counties which shows the original road configuration.
The Medina Daily Journal of March 27, 1930 noted that “Work has begun on the bridge at Kuckville.” The new road bypassed the hamlet. Identified on maps as the Roosevelt Highway and the Great Lakes Seaway trail, the road is locally referred to as “Route 18.” The “old” bridge across Johnson Creek was dismantled in the 1940s.
Hoffman’s notes continue with details on “who lived where” that delight residents and their descendants, fodder for after-dinner discussions and ramblings:
“Prior to 1933, Kuckville remained much the same as it did in years previous with John Cann’ s store setting next to the church on the northwest corner of the road. To the south of Cann’s store set the coopershop…To the west was a large building that stored the barrels, and west of that was Howard Miller’s garage which set next to his house which is now owned by Jack Szyikowski”
Local history at its finest. Should any readers be interested in these specific accounts, please contact me at Catherine.cooper@orleanscountyny.gov.