Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


St. Paul of the Cross Monastery Church, South Side Slopes

St. Paul of the Cross Monastery Church

Charles F. Bartberger designed this magnificent church, one of only a very few large churches in this area still standing from before the Civil War (it was built in 1854). It is not that we had no large churches; it is only that the ensuing age of prosperity made most of the large ones even larger—or kicked them out of the way to make room for skyscrapers, as happened with the old St. Paul’s Cathedral downtown, also designed by Bartberger, which was bought and demolished by Henry Frick.

Monastery Avenue

This one has had good luck. It belongs to a still-active monastery in a neighborhood that, by its topographic nature, will probably never become prosperous enough to displace the church. It dominates the view up Monastery Street and Monastery Avenue.

Side of the church

A relief of Christ stumbling on the way to Calvary is over the main door.

St. Paul of the Cross

St. Paul of the Cross reminds us that our way to God lies through the passion of Christ. He wears a benevolent expression, but he is a ferocious terror to pigeons.

St. Paul of the Cross
St. Paul of the Cross Monastery Church

Cameras: Canon PowerShot SX150 IS; Kodak EasyShare Z1285.

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One response to “St. Paul of the Cross Monastery Church, South Side Slopes”

  1. YouTube has a film made at St. Paul’s Monastery in Pittsburgh back in 1961. Showing all the priests/brothers living at the Monastery at that time. Documentary is titled, “MONASTERY LIFE, PITTSBURGH, 1961”.

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