Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


The Mon Wharf in the 1890s

Mon Wharf in the 1890s
From History and Commerce of Pittsburgh and Environs, 1894.

The busy and chaotic Mon Wharf, where goods were loaded and unloaded and passengers came to board downstream-bound steamboats. This picture was published in 1894, and we can see the dawn of the skyscraper age just beginning to break: the Conestoga Building, finished in 1892, was the first building in Pittsburgh built on a steel frame, and one of the first in the world.

Conestoga Building

The view is quite different today (or in 2021, when these pictures were taken), though many of the same buildings are there. The Robert Moses plan ringed downtown Pittsburgh with expressways, as Moses had done with Manhattan, cutting off the people from the rivers. It was an understandable adaptation: if there must be expressways, the riverfronts made space for them without knocking down a lot of buildings. But it took us decades to begin to reclaim the shores with a system of parks and bicycle trails.

Firstside in May of 2021


One response to “The Mon Wharf in the 1890s”

  1. Sarah J Bradford

    Thank you for the many topics you discuss and the really magnificent photos. I’ve been looking at Wood St. and Firstside recently, but have looked at many other articles. Hope you will continue to keep up this great resource. sjb

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