Matthew Biddle shows two examples of how technology is bringing history to a wider audience.
The full content is available in the Winter 2014 Issue.
Go behind the headlines to discover the beginnings of this regional architectural treasure.
Nearly a century ago, vision and craftsmanship created a unique attraction. Now new visionaries and craftspeople have brought it back home.
Commissioned for the opening of the new Courier-Express Building in 1930, the mural painted by Charles Bigelow and Ernest Davenport is a significant piece of Buffalo's rich journalistic and artistic history.
When a fire erupted in the M.H. Birge & Sons Wallpaper Company factory in December 1880, the workers – many of whom were children – had little time to escape. John H. Grandits looks at the Birge fire as an example of the dangers of child labor.
By: John Percy
Geography's impact on the history of Western New York and Ontario's Niagara Peninsula.
Celebrating the Light, Color, and Architecture of the Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo 1901.
By: Dr. Kerry S. Grant
Western New York Heritage magazine’s editors, past and present, reflect on the organization’s first two decades.
Photos from the early 1920s capture the fun of a blustery Queen City winter.