Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/07/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Mike, Thanks for sharing your recollections of Pittsburgh. I take it you lived there at one time. The links are very interesting. I think we'll be taking your advice. Gratefully, MJK - ---------- >From: owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us (Leica Users digest) >To: leica-users-digest@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us >Subject: Leica Users digest V10 #20 >Date: Wed, Jul 14, 1999, 9:32 PM > > >Date: Wed, 14 Jul 1999 15:01:00 +0100 >From: Mark Walberg <Walberg@simmons.swmed.edu> >Subject: Re: [Leica] PITTSBURGH > >Pittsburgh is a pretty city. Take a walk throught Point State Park, where >the three rivers meet. Take a walk along the edge of Mount Washington, >across the Monongahela from downtown-the view from there is great, day or >night. You can see all the bridges from Mount Washington. The area called >Oakland, where the U. of Pittsburgh is, has a lot of interesting places. >The Carnegie Museum there is full of fascinating stuff. They've got great >dinosaurs. The art museum nearby is also good. Take a look in the Heinz >Chapel (a very pretty chapel), next to the U of Pitt Cathedral of Learning, >if it is open. > If you can, take a look at Gene Smith's Pittsburgh pictures. A lot of >them, along with many other historical pictures can be found in Stephan >Lorant's "Pittsburgh, The Story of an American City". The history of the >place is very interesting. Lorant's book has some remarkable photographs >of downtown at mid day that look almost dark - stores and cars have their >lights on - due to the coal burned to make steel. That is, of course, all >gone now. >There are also some good Pittsburgh pictures by Gene Smith here (look at >the link marked View Photographs). >http://www.doubletakemagazine.org/issues/12/smith/index.html > The Carnegie Library main branch in Oakland (next to U.Pitt and the >museum) has a photographic library that I plan to see the next time I'm >there. Here is a description - http://www.clpgh.org/exhibit/photog13.html > THe steel mills were neat, but they are gone. You can find a lot of >interesting old houses all over Pittsburgh - except where all the new >developments are being built. Manchester, on the North side, is a good >place to see the old houses. A drive through the huge Uniondale Cemetery, >also on the North Side is interesting, with some great views of downtown in >some spots. A visit to the locks on the river is kind of interesting. >There are locks here and there along the rivers that the barges and boats >must go through. The one I know well is the one in Emsworth, out the Ohio >River Blvd. If you have the time, it is fun to take a river boat ride from >downtown. > If you really have some time, you can drive out of Pittsburgh to Falling >water - which is a remarkable house that Frank Lloyd Wright built (for >Edgar Kauffman, I think). It is it in the country in a beautiful area. >The house has a stream going through it with a waterfall. > The area called the strip had some neat shops, including a teriffic >seafood shop (called Wolley's, I think). I don't know what the strip is >like now, but it is worth asking a Pittsburgher about it. > Yeah, I kind of miss Pittsburgh. Have fun. >- -Mark Walberg > >------------------------------