Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Church of the Epiphany, Lower Hill

West front of Epiphany Church

Edward Stotz was the architect of the building for Epiphany Church, with considerable interior work done by John T. Comès. It was built in 1903 to replace the old St. Paul’s Cathedral downtown as the downtown parish church after Henry Frick made the Catholic Diocese an offer it couldn’t refuse, and Epiphany served as the temporary cathedral for three years while the new St. Paul’s was going up in Oakland.

Epiphany Church

When the Lower Hill was demolished for “slum clearance,” Epiphany and its school were the only buildings allowed to survive. Thus Pittsburgh accomplished, here and at Allegheny Center, what Le Corbusier had failed to do in Paris: we created a sterile modern wasteland punctuated by a few ancient landmarks pickled in brine.

Detail of the West Front

These Romanesque columns and arches strongly remind old Pa Pitt of organ pipes.

Rose Window
West Front
Statue of Christ

Christ stands at the peak of the west front.

Statue of St. Peter

On Christ’s right hand, St. Peter with his key.

Statue of St. Paul

On Christ’s left hand, St. Paul with his book.

Angel

An angel with plenty of anti-pigeon armor prays for worshipers as they enter.

Epiphany Church
Epiphany School

The school is built in a simpler Romanesque style that links and subordinates it to the church.

“Epiphany” inscribed on the school
Fujifilm FinePix HS10.

Officially the Lower Hill has ceased to exist. It is counted as part of downtown in the city’s administrative scheme. But it has never been integrated into downtown, and indeed was forcibly cut off from downtown by the Crosstown Boulevard—a bad mistake recently ameliorated somewhat by building a park on top of the boulevard. With the new FNB Financial Center and other developments, there is some hope that this neglected wasteland may become city again. Meanwhile, Epiphany, now part of Divine Mercy Parish, still serves downtown worshipers, and perhaps will be there for new residents as the neighborhood grows and changes.



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