Harry Yates' massive barn in Orchard Park is threatened by development.
The full content is available in the Fall 2008 Issue.
The 1901 destruction of Buffalo’s North Street Cemetery produced one of the largest scandals in the city’s history.
This German immigrant, along with his family, engaged in a diverse array of ventures, the impact of which is still felt today.
Olmsted’s bicentennial provides an opportunity to examine the impact of his Buffalo park system on the development of one of the city’s neighborhoods.
Early in his career, future governor William H. Seward had to institute a regime of palliative measures in order to quell the axe-wielding settlers' riot against the Holland Land Company when their farms were threatened with imminent foreclosure.
By: John Percy
Geography's impact on the history of Western New York and Ontario's Niagara Peninsula.
Buffalo's rich sports history is shared through stories, photos, and artifacts spanning more than a century. A must-have for the sports enthusiast on your list!
Western New York Heritage magazine’s editors, past and present, reflect on the organization’s first two decades.
Situated between New York and the western states, Buffalo was an important transportation center in the days of the Erie Canal. Learn about the habits, sights and sounds of the Central Wharf – and about it's sudden destruction.