1925
- Famous sports personalities come to Springville to honor Pop Warner at a banquet on January 16th.
- A total solar eclipse takes place in January.
- Salzers Lumber moves to W. Main Street from their original Mill Street site.
- A.C. Adams enters the automobile and General Electric Appliance business in the village.
- Universalist Church Society (upon disbanding) donates their building as a new site for the Springville Public Library.
- Griffith Institute Centennial and Old Home Week are celebrated at a banquet for 750 and the Cascade Park Pavillion.
- Layne Water Company drills a well for the village on the Village Athletic Field (now owned by G.I.)
- Peter A Bifarella engages in the theatrical business as owner and operator of the Pantheon Theatre.
- Benjamin Minowitz operated the 5 Cents to a Dollar Store on Main Street.
- Elevated Water Storage tank (tower) built on a site near Franklin Street.
- The Griffith Institute Orchestra wins first place at the state musical contest in Syracuse. The band places third inn its division.
- Springville Travelers Motorcycle Club is organized with 13 charter members.
- Rotary Club of Springville receives its charter on January 29th.
- Glad Tidings Tabernacle Church is established.
- Springville Field and Stream is organized.
- Dr. Maurice O’Connor founds the Springville Clinic.
- Formation of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Springville Fire Department takes place.
- G.I. Varsity wins the Niagara Frontier Class A Basketball Championship and its victory over Akron.
- Village constructs a new fire department hall on Franklin Street.
- Webster Krise opens a meat market at 169 Main Street.
- Springville Foundry started by Leon Zimmer and Clarence Gilbert. The Company later became the Abrasive Shot & Grit.
- Bertrand Chaffee Hospital initiates care for the elderly on property provided by the Chaffee Estate.
- Springville’s Post Office building is completed.
- George Woodruff assumes management of the Market Basket store on Main Street. Mr. Woodruff holds the unique distinction of being informed by the War Department that he was killed in action and buried in France in October 1918.
- Field and Stream Cabin is erected.
- Village completes replacements of wooden water mains with those made of cast iron.
- Christian and Missionary Alliance Church is formed
- New York State Public Service Commission grants permission to the Edwards Motor Transit Company, Inc. to operate a bus route between Springville and Buffalo.
- Kessler and Gentner Auction is organized and their barn is completed the following year.
- Wading pool is built in the Franklin Street Park.
- With the death of E.N. Thurber, the SPRINGVILLE NEWS suspends operations after 40 years.
- Incorporation of the Springville Historical Society takes place.
- School centralization is completed as Griffith Institute unites 34 districts in nine towns, forming the states’ largest geographical district.
- Active participation by Springville citizens both on the home front and overseas, in World War II.
- Cascade B&O Railroad Bridge guarded against wartime sabotage.
- The Springville War Council recommends for special citation, Mr. and Mrs. Olin Brink, for the faithfulness in performance of duty at the Observation Post on Cattaraugus Street.
- Village is having a second water well drilled on North Central Avenue.
- Youth Incorporated in founded by Leo Schlade and George Whitehead.
- Mrs. Flora C. Haven of 60 Main Street receives word that her son, Capt. Hugh Haven, had been decorated by the president of Brazil for work he had done in the design of their destroyers.
- The local Civil Defense conducts a “Blackout” on the first Sunday of March.
- Prisoners of War serve as laborers at the Springville Canning Company Factory.
- Gray’s Mill on Main Street is destroyed by fire.
- Lions Club of Springville is organized on September 27th.
- Bertrand Chaffee Hospital is incorporated as a non-profit institution and a Board of Director’s is activated to represent the service area.
- Under the leadership of Dr. Ralph Waite, funds are raised for an addition to Chaffee Hospital.
- Springville Airport opens. (Now School Bus Barns)
- New Joylan Theatre is completed.
- 57 Passengers and Crew of the B&O Railroad are marooned in Springville during the March Blizzard of 1947.
- The G.I. Band under the direction of W.H. Camp is acclaimed the outstanding band in Western New York at the Spring Festival held at Amherst Central School.