Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


A Walk on Boyle Street, North Side

Boyle Street street sign

A short evening stroll on two blocks’ worth of Boyle Street, one of those narrow rowhouse-lined streets on the North Side near Allegheny General Hospital. The street sign above is on a corner house; the sign probably dates from the late 1800s, and the house, though altered with new windows and other adaptations, may date from before the Civil War.

1300 Boyle Street

The basement door makes us think of Alice in Wonderland.

Houses in the 1200 block

This Second Empire row was probably put up in the 1870s or 1880s, replacing earlier smaller houses. Thirty years ago this was a poor neighborhood, but now much restoration is being done, without wholesale displacement of the older residents.

Rowhouse with sea-turtle mural

You have a blank wall facing an alley? We can do something about that. The mural is by Jeremy Raymer, who has beautified many spots around the city, especially in Lawrenceville and on the North Side.

Rowhouse with sea-turtle mural
An Italianate house

An Italianate house, again altered with new windows, but preserving a splendid doorframe and some original carved wooden brackets.

Woodwork above the front door
Brackets
1320 Boyle Street
Small apartment building

An unusually attractive small apartment building whose details are well preserved. Addendum: It was built in about 1910, and the architects were Allison & Allison.1

Front elevation of the apartment building
Fujifilm FinePix HS20EXR.
  1. Philadelphia Real Estate Record & Builders’ Guide, October 27, 1909, p. 684: “Architects Allison & Allison, Westinghouse Building, have prepared plans for a brick and cement apartment house, to be erected at Boyle and Hemlock streets, North Side, for W. B. Nelson. It will be of brick, with stone trimmings, hardwood finish, steam heat and electric lights.” Thanks to David Schwing. ↩︎


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