Author: Father Pitt

  • Stained Glass in the Allegheny Cemetery Mausoleum

    America the Beautiful
    America the Beautiful,” by Katherine Lee Bates.

    The Allegheny Cemetery Mausoleum is now advertised as the Temple of Memories, because our taste has gone in that direction. It’s a very large communal mausoleum, built in 1960, and walking through the doors feels like going through a time portal into the end of the Eisenhower era. By far the most striking feature of the mausoleum is the series of stained-glass windows by Willet in Philadelphia and Hunt in Pittsburgh. They are some of the best modern stained glass in Pittsburgh, and they commemorate great triumphs of religious literature and music. We have a lot of large pictures here, so we’ll put them behind a “read more” link to avoid weighing down the front page.

    (more…)
  • Victorian Row in Lawrenceville

    247–253 Fist Street

    Separate ownership does funny things to rowhouses. This row of four would have matched originally; some owners have doubled down on the Victorian style, and some have done what they could with modern materials, leading to interesting effects along the property line.

    A porch pediment divided
    247 Fisk Street
    247–253 Fisk Street
    Fujifilm FinePix HS10; Kodak EasyShare Z1285.
  • Farm in Findlay Township

    Farm with cornfield and orchard

    Pittsburgh developed in octopus fashion, with long arms of urbanization following rivers and railroads, but much open country between the arms. Findlay Township, at the western end of Allegheny County, is still rural in many places. Here is a farm with cornfield and orchard.

    Farm in Findlay Township
    Olympus E-20N.
  • Bee Visiting Cosmos

  • Pylon of the Tenth Street Bridge

    Pylon of the Tenth Street Bridge

    Below, with bonus pigeons on a wire.

    Pylon of the South Tenth Street Bridge
    Kodak EasyShare Z981.
  • A Late Dahlia

  • Textures of the South Side

    Houses on Sidney Street

    A street of Georgian rowhouses, all in identical red brick, is a beautiful sight. But there is something jazzy and invigorating about the endless variety of textures in the back streets of the South Side, even if individually some of the artificial sidings people applied to their houses in the twentieth century were never very attractive. The textures are probably best appreciated in black and white, so old Pa Pitt stuck some monochromatic film in his Retinette and went for a walk around the block.

    Houses on 17th Street
    1615 Mingham Street
    Houses on 18th Street
    Kodak Retinette with Kentmere Pan 100 film.
  • Tomatillos and Tomatoes

    Tomatillo on a backdrop of tomatillos and tomatoes
    Konica Minolta DiMAGE Z6.

    A garden harvest in various colors.

  • Allegheny Arsenal Powder Magazine, Lawrenceville

    Allegheny Arsenal Powder Magazine

    Benjamin Henry Latrobe, much more famous for his work on the United States Capitol, was Pittsburgh’s first resident professional architect. This is his only remaining work here, and the only original 1814 building left from the Allegheny Arsenal.

    Insignia

    This plaque was originally on the gatehouse to the Arsenal grounds.

    Daughters of 1812 memorial

    A memorial put up by the Daughters of 1812 appears to have had a bronze relief, probably stolen many years ago.

    Daughters of 1812 plaque

    The Arsenal is most famous in history for exploding during the Civil War, killing dozens of the workers, many of whom were children. We note that the building where the powder was stored did not explode—an indication, perhaps, that the architect knew his business.

    Plaque on the powder magazine

    DESIGNED BY BENJAMIN H. LATROBE; BUILT BY CAPTAIN ABRAM R. WOOLLEY ON LAND PURCHASED BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FROM WILLIAM B. FOSTER. SERVED AS AMMUNITION PRODUCTION CENTER DURING INDIAN, MEXICAN AND CIVIL WARS. THIS TABLET COMMEMORATES AT LEAST 79 CIVILIAN WORKERS—MEN, WOMEN AND MANY CHILDREN—KILLED IN THREE MYSTERIOUS EXPLOSIONS, SEPTEMBER 17, 1862.

    Old Pa Pitt would add that the explosions were not as mysterious as all that. It was an arsenal. The place was devoted to manufacturing things that explode, using explosive materials. Everyone knew that Dupont & Co. had been supplying powder in leaky barrels, probably reused in spite of the specific requirement not to reuse them. Everyone knew there was explosive stuff dusting the ground here and there. The only mystery was which of several possible causes set off the first spark, and that mystery will probably never be solved.

    The remains of the dead were buried in a mass grave in Allegheny Cemetery, where an expensive marble memorial was put up. The marble eroded into illegibility by the 1920s, and it was replaced with a new monument with a bronze plaque that will last a few more centuries if it is not stolen and melted down.

    Names of the dead in the Arsenal explosion
    Allegheny Arsenal monument in Allegheny Cemetery

    Today the powder magazine sits in the middle of a pleasant urban oasis called Arsenal Park. Instead of explosive materials, it has rest rooms.

    Allegheny Arsenal Powder Magazine
    Powder magazine
    Powder magazine with 40th Street in the background
    Kodak EasyShare Z1285; Fujifilm FinePix HS10; Kodak EasyShare Z981.
  • Montours Church, Robinson Township

    Montours Presbyterian Church

    The current building is only a century old, but the congregation of Montours Church—also spelled Montour’s or Montour, depending on where you look—was founded in 1778, and the adjoining cemetery is full of Revolutionary War veterans.

    Date stone: “Montours Presb. Church, 1778–1832–1924”
    Montours Presbyterian Church
    Montours Church
    Chapel

    A modern chapel built in 1978 is as tall as it is long, with a striking window at the far end.

    Interior of the chapel
    Window from the outside
    Montours Cemetery, chapel, and church
    Cemetery, chapel, church
    A bell cast in 1888

    A bell cast in Cincinnati in 1888 sits beside the church; it probably came from the older building that the 1924 church replaced.

    Van Duzen & Tift, Cincinnati

    “Van Duzen & Tift Cincinnati.”

    Buckeye Bell Foundry, 1888
    1888
    Kodak EasyShare Z1285; Canon PowerShot SX150 IS; Samsung Galaxy A15 5G with Open Camera.

    “Buckeye Bell Foundry 1888.”