Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


Warwick House, Squirrel Hill

Stairwell window

Warwick House was built in 1910 for Howard Heinz, son of the ketchup king H. J. Heinz. The architects were Vrydaugh and Wolfe, and the construction budget was $75,000.(1) After the Heinzes it passed through the Hillmans, and now it belongs to the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh, from which it is rented by Opus Dei, the Catholic organization famed for its albino assassins.(2) But the organization seldom sends the assassins out against anyone but renowned curators; the rest of us are quite safe. At an open house this summer, old Pa Pitt was graciously allowed to take a few pictures of the beautifully maintained Jacobean interior. Above, the window in the grand staircase.

Front of the house

This picture of the front is not the best; the light was from the wrong direction. It means we will have to return soon at a different time of day.

Front door

The front door.

Front hall

The front hall; the door to the library is on the right, the grand staircase on the left.

Decorative woodwork

A little bit of the decorative woodwork in the front hall.

Grand staircase

The grand staircase.

Ceiling

Modern American houses forget about the ceiling, as if people never looked up. Warwick House does not make that mistake. This is the decorated ceiling in a side hall.

Chapel
Chapel

The former ballroom was converted into a chapel by the late Henry Menzies, an ecclesiastical architect whose specialty was refurbishing modernist churches of the 1960s and 1970s to make them suitable for liturgical worship. He liked to use a baldacchino to give proper emphasis to the altar. (The ballroom was added to the house later, probably in 1929 according to the current residents.)

Ceiling of the ballroom

The ceiling of the ballroom.

Footnotes


3 responses to “Warwick House, Squirrel Hill”

  1. […] It was built in 1912–1913, and the architects were Vrydaugh and Wolfe, who also designed Warwick House and (as Vrydaugh and Shepherd with T. B. Wolfe) Calvary Methodist in Allegheny West. This is one of […]

  2. […] The architects of the mausoleum were Vrydaugh & Wolfe, who also designed Warwick House for Howard […]

  3. […] distinguished architects to make the most of your money. Vrydaugh & Wolfe designed some huge millionaires’ mansions and a number of glorious stone churches, but they put their usual care into this little project as […]

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