The colossal sandstone frieze over the main entrance colonnade of the Art Deco style Buffalo City Hall in Buffalo, New York, was sculpted by Albert T. Stewart and designed in collaboration with John Wade, the chief architect. (Aug. 3, 2018)

Two of the 12 figures emerging from the stone of the third floor windows are said to possibly represent nature’s gifts and/or the months of the year of the Art Deco style Buffalo City Hall in Buffalo, New York.(Aug. 3, 2018)

This statue of young Abraham Lincoln, sculpted by Bryant Baker in 1935, depicts Lincoln sitting on an oak log with an axe near his feet, and a book on his right knee in Delaware Park near the Rose Garden in Buffalo, New York. (Aug. 3, 2018)

Yes, it’s the David, well a reproduction of Michelangelo’s David and this one was sculpted by
Sabatino de Angelis and F. Napoli in 1900 and can be seen from the highway cutting through Delaware Park in Buffalo, New York. (Aug. 3, 2018)

The West Ferry Street Bridge connects to Broderick Park over the Erie Canal in Buffalo, New York. Broderick Park is listed as a designated Network to Freedom site by the U.S. National Parks Service and recognized by historians as an historic terminus of the Underground Railroad between the United States and Canada. (Aug. 3, 2018)

Broderick Park in Buffalo, New York, has a small exhibit of information on the Underground Railroad and this poster about Harriet Tubman’s enormous role in getting enslaved people to freedom. According to the poster, many of Tubman’s trips north brought her into Buffalo where she may have worshipped at the Michigan Street Baptist Church located in the now Michigan Street African American Heritage Corridor. (Aug. 3, 2018)

The plaque at Broderick Park in Buffalo, New York, commemorating those involved with helping the enslaved find freedom and those of whom were enslaved seeking freedom. All involved risked their lives in the name of freedom. (Aug. 3, 2018)

At Broderick Park, at the foot of the West Ferry Street Bridge in Buffalo, New York, is this tribute with flags from the United States and Canada along with a plaque paying tribute to the men and women who crossed the water from this area over to Canada…which can be seen in the distance. Broderick Park is listed as a designated Network to Freedom site by the U.S. National Parks Service and recognized by historians as an historic terminus of the Underground Railroad between the United States and Canada. (Aug. 3, 2018)

At Broderick Park in Buffalo, New York, with the Peace Bridge, connecting the United States with Canada, which can be seen in the distance. (Aug. 3, 2018)

The walkway at Broderick Park in Buffalo, New York, with the historical markers providing information on enslaved persons who sought freedom and crossed the waters into Canada, which can be seen in the distance. (Aug. 3, 2018)

The walkway at Broderick Park in Buffalo, New York, with the historical markers providing information on enslaved persons who sought freedom and crossed the waters into Canada. (Aug. 3, 2018)

A mural at the corner of Niagara and Jersey Streets in Buffalo, New York, by Betsy Casanas in 2017. (Aug. 3, 2018)

Several of the fire hydrants are painted red with a blue top. This one is at the corner of Niagara and Jersey Streets in Buffalo, New York. (Aug. 3, 2018)