Father Pitt

Would you like to see a random article?
Of course you would.

    • About Father Pitt
    • Contents & Search
      • Alphabetical Index
    • Father Pitt’s Other Collections
      • Father Pitt’s Pittsburgh Encyclopedia
    • Privacy
    • Using These Pictures
  • Row of Houses on Penn Avenue, Strip

    Row of houses on Penn Avenue, Strip District

    At the turn of the twentieth century, the Strip was a chaotic and lively mess of huge industries, small business, and rowhouses. Few of the houses remain; here is one of the surviving rows. These are what old Pa Pitt calls Baltimore-style rowhouses: a row where the houses are all put up as more or less one building, flush up against the sidewalk, with only a set of steps to the front door to separate them from the city outside. These were built as rental houses, probably in the 1890s or very early 1900s; they were still all under the same ownership in 1923, according to old maps. At first they had small back yards on the alley in the rear, but by 1910 those back yards had been filled in with tiny alley houses, which are still there today, and some day when it isn’t so cold old Pa Pitt will walk around to the alley and get their picture, too.

    Rowhouses in the Strip

    Surprisingly, all the houses in the original group survive. The house on the right end had its front completely rebuilt about ten years ago; the fourth house from the left has had a “picture window” installed in the parlor. The rest of the houses look more or less the way they have always looked.

    Row of houses in the Strip
    Fujifilm FinePix HS10; Canon PowerShot SX150 IS.

    Comments
    January 10, 2025
  • A Monochromatic Stroll on Firwood Drive in Cedarhurst Manor, Mount Lebanon

    1050 Firwood Drive

    Cedarhurst Manor began to fill up in about 1930, though much of it was empty until after the Second World War. The block of Firwood Avenue just off Bower Hill Road has a representative mixture of houses from the 1930s and early 1940s. Since it was a dim day anyway, we present these pictures in black and white, which makes it easy to compare the forms and masses of the houses without being distracted by details of color.

    1050 Firwood Drive
    1013 Firwood Drive

    This house seems to have been a builder’s standard design; it is almost identical except in material to the house next to it.

    1019 Firwood Drive
    1019 Firwood Drive
    1014 Firwood Drive
    1014 Firwood Drive
    1025 Firwood Drive
    1031 Firwood Drive
    1031 Firwood Drive
    1038 Firwood Drive
    1044 Firwood Drive
    1044 Firwood Drive
    1056 Firwood Drive
    1062 Firwood Drive
    Nikon COOLPIX P100.

    Comments
    January 9, 2025
  • The Blinker House in Murdoch Farms

    Blinker House

    This house, built in 1925, was designed by Charles Tattersall Ingham, according to an article in the Trib from back in September. Ingham was half of the firm of Ingham & Boyd, a big deal around here—they designed many of our biggest schools, including all the schools in Mount Lebanon for decades. Both Ingham and Boyd had a mania for symmetry. They also had a taste for the classical in architecture, but they disliked columns. It takes all kinds.

    Perspective view

    But why is it called the “Blinker House”? The Trib article explains that it sits at a very complicated five-way intersection, where years ago there used to be a flashing red light. The blinker is long gone, but Pittsburghers have long memories, and everyone in the neighborhood knows it as the Blinker House.

    From the right

    As of this writing, the house is for sale, and the asking price is a little under 2½ million dollars—down from 2.6 million when the Trib article was written.

    Left side of house
    Sony Alpha 3000.

    Comments
    January 8, 2025
  • Murdoch Farms in the Snow

    5421 Maynard Street

    Murdoch Farms, a dairy farm until the early twentieth century, is the most expensive section of Squirrel Hill. In the 1920s it filled up with mansions designed by our leading architects, and most of them are still in close to original shape, at least on the outside. Father Pitt took a stroll on a dim and snowy afternoon to get a few pictures.

    1411 Inverness Avenue
    1342 Inverness Avenue
    1342
    1342
    1342
    1331 Inverness Avenue
    1331
    1330 Inverness Avenue
    1330
    1324 Inverness Avenue
    1310 Inverness Avenue
    Sony Alpha 3000.

    We’ll see more of Murdoch Farms from this same expedition, including some individual houses whose architects old Pa Pitt can identify.


    Comments
    January 8, 2025
  • Building the Tower at PNC Plaza

    Early construction on the Tower at PNC Plaza

    The Tower at PNC Plaza will be ten years old this year. It occurred to Father Pitt that he had enough pictures in his collection to make up a visual story of the construction of the building, so here they are. Above, the progress as of February 18, 2014.

    Before topping out

    June 27, 2014, before the construction of the cap began.

    In August, 2014

    August 29, 2014.

    In early March, 2015

    March 2, 2015.

    Mid-March

    March 10, 2015, with bonus bus coming toward you.

    On St. Patrick’s Day, 2015

    March 17, 2015.

    June 13

    June 13, 2015.

    September 10, 2015

    September 10, 2015, just a few weeks before opening.

    November 12, 2020

    The completed tower on November 12, 2020.


    Comments
    January 8, 2025
  • Irene Kaufmann Settlement Auditorium, Hill District

    Irene Kaufmann Settlement

    Edward Stotz was the architect of this auditorium, built in 1928. It was the centerpiece of the Irene Kaufmann Settlement, which was founded by the Kaufmanns of Kaufmann’s department store to memorialize a daughter who died young; its purpose was to serve the poor immigrants of the Hill.

    Irene Kaufmann Settlement
    Inscription: “Irene Kaufmann Settlement”
    Entrance
    Irene Kaufmann Settlement
    Comments
    January 7, 2025
  • Pittsburgh Gage & Supply Co., Strip

    Pittsburgh Gage & Supply Co.

    This was a warehouse, with offices and showrooms, built in 1907 for a company that sold a wide variety of products, from ball-bearing grinders to home appliances—including, according to a comment below, an automobile called the Duquesne, which never made it into full production, and about which Father Pitt would like to hear more from anyone who has information. (Note, by the way, that the company’s owners were among the many stubborn Pittsburghers who kept the H at the end of the city’s name through the dark days when it was officially banned.) Its 1913 catalogue is more than two thousand pages, and the title page shows us why so much effort went into making this industrial building attractive: because it had to look good in the engraving.

    Pittsburgh Gage & Supply Co. in 1913
    Pittsburgh Gage & Supply Co. Blue Book of Supplies, 1913.

    This picture—which is probably the architects’ rendering, since the same picture shows up in other sources even before the building was completed—shows the building before it was expanded. The architects were the William G. Wilkins Co., designers of numerous warehouses and industrial buildings in Pittsburgh, including the Frick & Lindsey Co. warehouse, now the Andy Warhol Museum. The addition to the left of the building was built in 1919 or 1920; the same architects supervised it, so it matches the rest very neatly. William Glyde Wilkins was an engineer; to do the architecting in his firm, he had the very capable Joseph F. Kuntz, who loved terra-cotta decoration.

    Entrance
    Tower
    Fujifilm FinePix HS10.

    One important line the company sold was the Gainaday brand of home appliances. In the early part of the twentieth century, middle-class families were learning to live without servants. It meant the housewife had to do the work previously done by maids and housekeepers. But this was the mechanical age: a machine could take the place of a servant. It was so efficient, in fact, that you could gain a day over the course of your week of housewifely duties.

    Gainaday washer-wringer brochure
    From a 1920 brochure for the Gainaday Electric Washer-Wringer.

    The building was promoted as a “model warehouse,” a shining example of what could be done with this sort of building, and Pittsburgh’s Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company, the biggest name in toilets (which later merged with American Radiator to form American-Standard), took out a full-page ad in a journal of the toilet trade to boast that the plumbing fixtures were all Standard brand.

    Advertisement attributing Pittsburgh Gage and Supply Company building to the William G. Wilkins Co.
    From Modern Sanitation, February, 1902.

    The magazine Rock Products for November 22, 1907, gave a detailed description of the building as it was going up, with—once again—the same illustration.


    Pittsburg Gage and Supply Company.

    The immense building now being erected by the Pittsburg Gage and Supply Company at Thirtieth Street and Liberty Avenue, Pittsburg, Pa., is constructed of steel, brick and concrete fireproofing, equipped with automatic sprinklers throughout, and when completed will be the largest, most modern and thoroughly equipped supply house in the world.

    For the concrete work Lehigh Portland cement was used throughout. The W. G. Wilkins Company, Westinghouse Building, were the architects, and the George Hogg Company the contractors.

    The first floor will be used as a general salesroom; the second floor will be taken up by the offices and shipping departments of the company. All the other floors and the basement will be used as storage space for their mammoth stock. A notable feature of the main building is the central_tower rising more than forty feet above the roof. In this tower will be located water tanks holding 65,000 gallons, which will be used for the house supply and the automatic sprinkler system.

    In connection with the building there is being erected a six-story fireproof building, in which will be manufactured the Pittsburg steam specialties. It will also contain a thoroughly modern brass foundry and pipe shop. Electric cranes are to be used throughout, and all machinery, elevators, etc., will be electric-motor-driven.

    A joint siding of the Pennsylvania, Baltimore and Ohio and Pittsburg Junction railroads will afford excellent shipping facilities. Adjoining this siding they are constructing a large iron, steel and pipe warehouse, in which will be carried the largest stock in Pittsburg, if not in the Central States. Adjoining this building there is a vacant frontage of almost 100 feet, which will be used for storage and switching purposes.

    The present stores and warehouses of the Pittsburg Gage and Supply Company are located at 309-321 Water Street, and its manufacturing plant at Thirty-first Street. The officers are: W. L. Rodgers, president; J. Lee Rodgers, secretary; R. F. Ramsey, treasurer; A. F. Maxwell, assistant treasurer; M. R. Porter, sales manager, and H. E. Haller, superintendent.


    Comments
    One response
    January 6, 2025
  • West Side of the Diamond

    West side of the Diamond
    Nikon COOLPIX P100.

    The west side of the Diamond or Market Square, seen from Graeme Street.


    Comments
    January 6, 2025
  • St. Philip’s Church, Crafton

    St. Philip’s Church

    Designed by the Akron architect William P. Ginther, St. Philip’s presides over a prominent spot in the middle of Crafton, and its lofty spire can be seen from all over the borough.

    St. Philip’s Church

    Mr. Ginther’s other works in our area are Immaculate Heart of Mary, Polish Hill, and St. Mary’s in McKees Rocks. His churches are concentrated in eastern Ohio, but he designed several others in Pennsylvania and New York and even as far away as California. On one of his other sites, Father Pitt has pictures of St. Bernard’s Church in downtown Akron and St. Joseph’s Church in St. Joseph, Ohio.

    West Front entrance
    West front
    Pinnacles
    Side entrance
    Side entrance
    Tower
    St. Philip’s Church
    Rectory
    Sony Alpha 3000; Canon PowerShot SX150 IS.

    The rectory, with its stone below and brick above, makes a good transition between the church and the school next door, and we would not be surprised if A. F. Link, architect of the school, designed it for exactly that purpose.


    Comments
    January 5, 2025
  • Snow Flurry

    Liberty Avenue in the Strip looking toward downtown Pittsburgh
    Canon PowerShot SX150 IS.

    A snow flurry downtown as seen from the Strip.


    Comments
    January 4, 2025
←Previous Page
1 … 30 31 32 33 34 … 405
Next Page→