
Fifth Avenue in Shadyside was the most famous of the millionaires’ rows in Pittsburgh. But there were some more modest houses as well—“modest” being a comparative term here. Some predated the arrival of the millionaires, and some were beyond the main stretch of mansions. Many have been replaced by postwar apartment buildings, but a number of these houses survive. A while ago, Father Pitt took an evening stroll on Fifth Avenue to have a look at some of them. Above, a wood-frame Queen Anne mansion with picturesque protrusions in all directions.

A center-hall house in the turn-of-the-twentieth-century interpretation of Georgian style.

Another center-hall house of the sort old Pa Pitt would call a center-hall foursquare. Walking around to the side reveals a fat turret that must add to the interest of the interior.


Another Georgian house, though the Georgian era was lamentably ignorant of buff Kittanning brick.


From the old days, before the millionaires, here is a wide I-house whose main part seems to have been built before 1872.
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