History & Culture · Finger Lakes
Greece Faces the Genesee Light
Greece's local story ties its town flag, Lake Ontario shoreline, and Charlotte-Genesee Lighthouse to the Genesee River mouth.
Published July 5, 2026 · Last verified July 5, 2026
Greece has a water story hiding in plain sight on its town flag. The town history explains that the official flag, adopted in 1954, places the old lighthouse at the mouth of the Genesee River in the center. That lighthouse was built in 1822, the same year Greece became its own town.
The detail is small, but it opens the map. Greece sits northwest of Rochester with its northern edge along Lake Ontario. Its history reaches toward Charlotte, the Genesee River mouth, old lake travel, and the shoreline world that existed before the town became a large Rochester suburb.
The visitor page also notes the town’s eight miles of Lake Ontario shoreline, with beaches, wetlands, bays, ponds, and wildlife north of the Ridge.
The Charlotte-Genesee Lighthouse Historical Society keeps the old landmark active through tours, exhibits, and local maritime history. That gives Greece a public memory people can visit, not just a symbol printed on a flag.
Once you notice the lighthouse, Greece feels more layered. There is the everyday suburban town of schools, parks, shopping, and neighborhoods. There is also the lake town, with the Ridge running east and west, flatland opening toward Ontario, and the Genesee River meeting the lake near Charlotte. The flag quietly points to that older shoreline identity. It is a nice clue for anyone trying to understand why Greece belongs to both Rochester’s suburban story and Lake Ontario’s maritime one.