Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Eastminster Presbyterian Church, East Liberty

Tower of Eastminster United Presbyterian Church

Built in 1893 as Sixth United Presbyterian, this church was designed by William S. Fraser, who was a big deal in Pittsburgh in the later 1800s. Fraser adopted a very Richardsonian kind of Romanesque for this church, putting its congregation right at the top of the fashion heap for the moment.

Eastminster Presbyterian
Postcard of Sixth United Presbyterian Church
Undated postcard, about 1900, from the Presbyterian Historical Society via Wikimedia Commons.

If you ask why there are two Presbyterian churches so close together—this and East Liberty Presbyterian—the answer is that there were two kinds of Presbyterians. Sixth U. P. belonged to the United Presbyterians, a Pittsburgh-based splinter group that eventually merged with the other Presbyterians in 1958. Most neighborhoods and boroughs with large Protestant populations thus had two Presbyterian churches—or more, since there were Reformed Presbyterians and Cumberland Presbyterians as well.

Eastminster U. P. Church
Workmen restoring stained glass

The stained glass is being restored slowly and carefully.

Highland Avenue entrance
Central door
Eastminster United Presbyterian Church
Organized 1856, built 1893
Capitals
Lantern
Side entrance
Station Street entrance
Vine ornament
Sony Alpha 3000 with 7Artisans 35mm f/1.4 lens; Canon PowerShot SX150 IS.


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