
Father Pitt will admit right away that he is not sure this was the convent, and perhaps a well-informed reader could enlighten us. He arrived at his conclusion by elimination. There was a church, a school, a rectory, and a convent in the old Sacred Heart parish before it moved out of Braddock. The school still stands; the church was demolished; the rectory was a house the church bought on Talbot Avenue; and so we are left with this building facing 6th Street, on the grounds of the church, which was probably the convent.

The style of the building is unusual and interesting, and we suspect it might have been designed by one of the local Mon Valley architects about whom Pa Pitt knows too little.

The entrance is surrounded by decorative terra cotta in a good state of preservation.


The wrought-iron fence in front of the building is original, and an exceptionally well-preserved example of its type—though probably not for too much longer.

Old Pa Pitt would love to know how that room over the entrance looked before it was glass-blocked.

The polygonal side and rear dormers are unusual and attractive.

When the church next to the building was demolished, it left a big flat lot that some daring urban pioneer who bought the building could turn into a splendid formal garden.

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