Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Remnants of German Bloomfield

Deutsche Ev. Prot. Baum’s Gemeinde

If you had asked Pittsburghers a century ago what kind of neighborhood Bloomfield was, they would have told you it was a very German neighborhood, with a few Irish mixed in, and a little pocket of Italians starting to move in back near the tracks. Go back a bit further, into the late 1800s, and hardly an Italian name is to be seen among the property owners.(1)

Here is a uniquely well-preserved relic of German Bloomfield, whose date stone tells is that it was built in 1882 as the Baum German Evangelical Protestant Congregation. It now belongs to a charity called Shepherd Wellness Community that keeps it in beautiful shape.

Date stone: Deutsche Ev. Prot. Baum’s Gemeinde, 1882
Front of the church
Side of the church

Now, if we turn around and look up the street, we’ll find something else uniquely well preserved in a different way.

Bloomfield Liedertafel Singing Society
Canon PowerShot SX150 IS.

This building has seen layers and layers of renovations and alterations, but it goes back to the 1880s, if we read our old maps right. It appears on an 1890 map as the Bloomfield Liedr. S. Society, and on a map from a decade later under the fuller name Bloomfield Lieder-Tafel Singing Society. And if you look on Google Maps, you will find that it still appears as the Bloomfield Liedertafel Singing Society. It is still a private club devoted to music—a social relic of German Bloomfield, still in its original building.


Footnotes


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