![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cd/Bigham_House%2C_Chatham_Village%2C_2015-06-25%2C_02.jpg/953px-Bigham_House%2C_Chatham_Village%2C_2015-06-25%2C_02.jpg)
Today this house is used as a clubhouse for residents of Chatham Village. It was built in 1844 or 1849 (Father Pitt has seen both dates) for Thomas James Bigham, a notorious abolitionist who was rumored to harbor fugitive slaves here. Fortunately for him, there was not much sympathy for slave laws in these parts: Pittsburgh was riddled with Underground Railroad stations.
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/73/Bigham_House%2C_Chatham_Village%2C_2015-06-25%2C_03.jpg/800px-Bigham_House%2C_Chatham_Village%2C_2015-06-25%2C_03.jpg)
These pictures were taken in late evening light (individual pictures taken with a Canon PowerShot S45, then stitched with Hugin to produce the wide angles you see here). There’s a fair amount of grain if you look closely. Low-light performance is one aspect of digital cameras that has definitely improved, and Father Pitt would do much better in low light with a more recent camera. He would also pay about a thousand dollars for a more or less equivalent camera, rather than the six dollars he paid for the old Canon.