Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Holy Cross Church, Glassport, by Titus de Bobula

Holy Cross Church in its original state
From The New Holy Cross Church, 1954, a booklet published when the current Holy Cross Church opened.

This was perhaps the last church designed by Titus de Bobula in his short architectural career, and it was an extraordinary work. It was faced entirely with concrete, and the architect gave free rein to his love of sweeping curves and tapering forms—note, for example, how the continuous tapering of the tower was supplemented by an inverted tapering of the arch at the entrance.

In the 1950s, the congregation built a much larger church from a design by the prolific Monessen church architect H. Ernest Clark. But the old church was kept as a social hall, and—thanks to the eagle eye of our correspondent David Schwing—we have discovered that the building is still standing.

Holy Cross Church

Almost everything that made the church a unique work of art is gone. The windows are blocked in; the decorations are stripped off; the spire is gone and the tower truncated. But we can still see the outline of that unique arch at the entrance. And this is the only one of Titus de Bobula’s concrete-faced churches to have survived at all—at least as far as old Pa Pitt knows. With just a few minutes to stop in Glassport on his way from here to there, Father Pitt took a bunch of pictures with three different cameras to document the church before it succumbs to complete decay.

Front of the church
Entrance arch
Holy Cross Church
Tower
Side of the church
Holy Cross Church
Rear of the church
Holy Cross Church
Front of the church
Tower
Front of the church
Sony Alpha 3000; Fujifilm FinePix HS10; Samsung Galaxy A15 5G.


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