Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Mother of Sorrows Church, Norwood

Mother of Sorrows Church

Mother of Sorrows Church was sold to a nondenominational congregation some time ago, and when Father Pitt took these pictures some maintenance work was being done, so we hope the building will stand for a long time to come. But old Pa Pitt misses the original parish for one very selfish reason: every year it had a festival, and every year it advertised the festival with banners stretched across Island Avenue at the bottom of the hill proclaiming in big, cheery letters, “MOTHER OF SORROWS FESTIVAL!” If Father Pitt had known the parish was closing, he would have bought those banners and donated them to the History Center.

Cornerstone: Mother of Sorrows Church, 1925 A. D.
Mother of Sorrows, perspective view
Mother of Sorrows, side view showing round apse

Note the round apse in the rear.

Mother of Sorrows with rectory

The rectory was built from matching Kittanning brick; a later extension just about doubled the size of it.

Rectory
Connection between church and rectory

The rectory was connected to the church by this little infill decorated with patterned brickwork.

Tower dome

The tower terminates in a cross-topped dome teetering on the brink of Art Deco.

Mother of Sorrows Church
Volutes
Rose ornament
Lantern
Fujifilm FinePix HS10.

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