Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Relics on Walnut Street, Shadyside

House at Walnut and Copeland

The business strip along Walnut Street developed fairly late in the history of Shadyside; much of it was still residential a century ago. If we raise our eyes above ground-floor level, we can see that these little shops are built around a much older house, dating from the 1880s to judge by old maps.

Rear of the house

A few blocks eastward on Walnut Street we find a different kind of conversion.

Walnut and Negley

Here is a Second Empire mansion, built in the 1870s, converted to an apartment building, probably in the 1920s. The stucco addition on the front, with its cartoonish half-timbering that looks like a ten-year-old’s idea of Tudor architecture, fits better than it deserves to with the original house thanks to the simple expedient of painting everything white and matching the trim color.



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