With work started in 1884, Rochester's present City Hall, was constructed in a building boom by the Federal Government to house Post Offices and Federal courthouses. Started from a design by Rochester architect Harvey Ellis, but finished by the Federal architects under Mifflen Bell, the building owes it's design to a revival of Romanesque architecture popularized by H. H. Richardson. Located on all four sides of the building are an interesting collection of sculptural faces- Greenmen-Greenwomen-and Medieval inspired faces of Princes-Princess, exaggerated paupers and fanciful beasts . Intrigued by the origins and the shear beauty of the sculptors I have photographed and completed a key to the location of every face on the building. On forty-one different locations, usually at the end of a window arch, exist these stone faces...