Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


St. Pamphilus Church (Our Lady of Victory Church), Beechview

St. Pamphilus Church

Casimir Pellegrini Associates were the architects of this church, whose cornerstone was laid in 1963. It was a Franciscan parish until just a few years ago. Unlike some other abandoned Catholic churches, this one has a happy ending: it was bought by the thriving Lebanese Maronite Catholic congregation of Our Lady of Victory, which began in Brookline (or arguably earlier in the Lower Hill) and spent years banished to the wilds of Scott Township. In honor of Pittsburgh’s best Lebanese festival, which begins today and lasts all weekend, here are quite a few pictures of St. Pamphilus/Our Lady of Victory, which old Pa Pitt has done his best to make look like period-appropriate Kennedy-era Kodachrome slides.

Statue and inscription—St. Pamphilus

The Our Lady of Victory congregation has graciously allowed St. Pamphilus to stay in his home on the front wall of the church, where he distributes bread to begging hands.

Statue of St. Pamphilus
Face of St. Pamphilus
St. Pamphilus Church

Father Pitt will admit that he does not find the nave the most attractive of all our church buildings. It is dignified and spacious, and that is enough. But the tower, a mailbox on stilts, captures his imagination, and he would hate to see anything happen to it.

Tower
Tower
Tower
Tower
St. Pamphilus Church
St. Pamphilus Church
Entrance

The church was dedicated to St. Pamphilus, but it is St. Francis who greets you at the door with his usual motto “Pax et bonum.”

Entrance and tower
Our Lady of Victory shrine

This shrine to Our Lady of Victory is now in its third location.

Honor roll

Father Pitt makes it a practice to try to record all the names on a war memorial, because sometimes things happen to inscriptions. If you enlarge this picture, every name should be clearly legible.

Msgr. Elias P. Basil plaque

A plaque remembers Msgr. Elias P. Basil, the founding pastor of Our Lady of Victory parish. He had been pastor of St. Anne’s, the Maronite church in the Lower Hill. The story is that he promised St. Mary that, if all his parishioners came home safe from the Second World War, he would build a church in her honor. They did, and he did.

Cornerstone of St. Anne Church

St. Anne Church was on Fulton, later Fullerton, Street, one of the Lower Hill streets that no longer exist because they were urban-renewaled to death. This cornerstone was preserved from the demolished church.

Arabic inscription
Cornerstone of St. Anne Church
St. Pamphilus Church
St. Pamphilus Church
Sony Alpha 3000; Nikon COOLPIX P100.


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