An empty ladle stands at the end of an old ship canal that once served the Hanna Furnace and Bethlehem Steel companies as a memorial to the generations of steelworkers of Lackawanna
View from the Southern side of the depot. Built in 1908 of red sandstone. To the right is the railroad tracks. On the other side of the tracks is Medina Cold Storage.
Side view of St. John's Episcopal Church facing the west. Opposite of the church can be seen the backs of the the historic buildings located on Main St, Medina.
Built in 1908 of brown sandstone. Large white columns adorn the front. To the left The First Baptist Church can be seen. Across the street is The Church of God Pentecostal in red brick.
Front view of the Boxwood Chapel at the entrance to the cemetery. Built in 1903 using mostly brown Sandstone from the McCormick Quarry. The design is typical of Gothic Revival architecture. Route 63 can be seen adjacent to the entrance.
Back side of the Chapel looking towards Route 63. You can see the chapel is built directly into the hill. Behind the chapel you can see some of the older headstones located in the cemetery.
Front entrance to St. John's Episcopal Church. Known as the "church in the middle of the road" in Ripley's Believe It or Not. It is bordered by Church St on the East and West and E. Center St on the North.
Empty field on Wasson near Ridge Road. Site of the boardinghouse which was the setting of Ruben Santiago Hudson's play Lackawanna Blues and its later movie adaptation.