Tag: Norwood

  • Norwood Incline Shelter, McKees Rocks

    Norwood Incline shelter

    Most Pittsburghers know that there were once many more inclines than the two we have now; perhaps as many as seventeen running at once. Some of the vanished ones have left visible remains, like the power house for the Mount Oliver Incline. Here is another piece of an incline that most of us have probably never heard of: the Norwood Incline, which as far as old Pa Pitt knows was the only suburban incline. This little structure was a shelter for passengers waiting at the base of the incline.

    1917 Hopkins plat map from Historic Pittsburgh.

    The Norwood Incline was built to connect the newly developed hilltop suburb of Norwood to the streetcar line at the base of the hill in McKees Rocks. (The connect-the-dots lines on the map represent the streetcars going both ways on Island Avenue.) It was initially free to ride; later a fare of a penny was introduced, giving it the popular name “Penny Incline.”

    1917 Hopkins plat map from Historic Pittsburgh.

    Near the upper end of the incline was Norwood Hall, where the book of Pittsburgh’s Inclines tells us that “many sports events were held.” We presume that hall is the large frame structure marked “PAVILION” on this map.

    “The two little yellow cars ran on only three rails,” we read in an unsourced quotation in Pittsburgh’s Inclines, “causing strangers to fear a mid-hillside collision; but by a deftly devised curve, the cars would suddenly switch out and pass.”

    Norwood Incline shelter

    The incline closed in 1923 and was replaced by steps; the steps have since disappeared as well. But this little shelter remains, with its monograms to remind us of its history.

    Pillar with initial N
    Monogram initial N
    Norwood Incline shelter
    Norwood Incline shelter
    Kodak EasyShare Z1285; Fujifilm FinePix HS10; Samsung Galaxy A15 5G.

  • Mother of Sorrows Church, Norwood

    Mother of Sorrows Church

    Mother of Sorrows Church was sold to a nondenominational congregation some time ago, and when Father Pitt took these pictures some maintenance work was being done, so we hope the building will stand for a long time to come. But old Pa Pitt misses the original parish for one very selfish reason: every year it had a festival, and every year it advertised the festival with banners stretched across Island Avenue at the bottom of the hill proclaiming in big, cheery letters, “MOTHER OF SORROWS FESTIVAL!” If Father Pitt had known the parish was closing, he would have bought those banners and donated them to the History Center.

    Cornerstone: Mother of Sorrows Church, 1925 A. D.
    Mother of Sorrows, perspective view
    Mother of Sorrows, side view showing round apse

    Note the round apse in the rear.

    Mother of Sorrows with rectory

    The rectory was built from matching Kittanning brick; a later extension just about doubled the size of it.

    Rectory
    Connection between church and rectory

    The rectory was connected to the church by this little infill decorated with patterned brickwork.

    Tower dome

    The tower terminates in a cross-topped dome teetering on the brink of Art Deco.

    Mother of Sorrows Church
    Volutes
    Rose ornament
    Lantern
    Fujifilm FinePix HS10.
  • Norwood

    Norwood Honor Roll

    Norwood is a traditionally Italian neighborhood in Stowe Township, originally a suburban development of modest detached houses connected to McKees Rocks and the Pittsburgh transit system by its own incline. The Norwood Incline closed in 1923, though a little shelter at the bottom station remains (see pictures of the Norwood Incline Shelter here). By that time, it was easy to get to the neighborhood by automobile or trolley.

    The Norwood Honor Roll, above, no longer has its honor roll. Many neighborhoods had painted honor rolls, and it is possible that this one was painted. Or it is possible that a bronze plaque was stolen and sold to a scrap dealer, who, faithfully believing that people are fundamentally honest, never even suspected that the hunk of bronze with names all over it was stolen. Perhaps someone from the neighborhood can tell us the story. The painted dedication is an act of love from someone in the neighborhood.

    107–111 Harlem Avenue

    Many of the buildings in what was the business district of Norwood are faced with Kittanning brick, but clad the rest of the way around with cheap ordinary brick.

    603 and 605 Benwood Avenue

    Layers of history and cycles of prosperity and decline can be read in these two buildings. It looks as though a small business, owned by the residents of the house to the right, grew and prospered and faded and was finally replaced with apartments. The renovations to the building on the left suggest that there was probably plenty of money in the 1970s.

    215 McCoy Road

    This tall and narrow building looks like a hotel in the Pittsburgh sense—a bar with a few rooms upstairs.

    215 McCoy Road
    119 Harlem Avenue
    Fujifilm FinePix HS10; Samsung Galaxy A15 5G.

    Note the patterned bricks, which remind us of similar decorations in West Park.