Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


A. M. E. Brown Chapel, North Side

A. M. E. Brown Chapel

This historically Black congregation has met in this building for more than 120 years. Some of the stained glass is being restored, so old Pa Pitt will have to return for more pictures when the work is done. The architect was Frederick Sauer,1 who specified his favorite buff Kittanning brick for the job. These streets in the central part of the North Side are tiny, and Sauer’s challenge was to cram as much church as he could into a minuscule lot. He employed the usual Pittsburgh expedient of putting the sanctuary upstairs, with Sunday-school rooms and offices on the ground floor. It seems, by the way, that old Pa Pitt succeeded in finding the architect where other local historians failed (or didn’t try), but the citation is no surprise. This buff Kittanning brick was almost Sauer’s signature, and the building looks like what would happen if you squished St. Mary of the Mount into an impossibly tiny lot.

Cornerstone with date 1903
Front elevation
Tower
A. M. E. Brown Chapel
Fujifilm FinePix HS20EXR.
  1. “Notes for the Afro-American,” Pittsburg Press, June 22, 1902, p. 7. “The plans and specifications of the new Brown chapel, Allegheny, are about completed, and in a few days Architect F. C. Sauer will advertise for bids and material.” ↩︎


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