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Point State Park

Point State Park (locally known as The Point) is a Pennsylvania state park which is located on 36 acres (150,000 m2) in Downtown Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA, at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, forming the Ohio River.

Point State Park
IUCN category V (protected landscape/seascape)
Point State Park in Fall
Location of Point State Park in Pennsylvania
Point State Park (the United States)
LocationPittsburgh, Allegheny, Pennsylvania, United States
Coordinates40°26′30″N 80°00′43″W / 40.44167°N 80.01194°W / 40.44167; -80.01194
Area36 acres (15 ha)
Elevation718 ft (219 m)[1]
EstablishedAugust 1974 [1]
Named forthe point of confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers forming the Ohio River
Governing bodyPennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
Website
Forks of the Ohio
Marker denoting the point of confluence
NRHP reference No.66000643[2]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966
Designated NHLOctober 9, 1960[3]

Built on land that was acquired via eminent domain from industrial enterprises during the 1950s, this park opened in August 1974[4] after construction was completed on its iconic fountain. Pittsburgh settled on the current design after rejecting an alternative plan for a Point Park Civic Center designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.

The park also includes the outlines and remains of two of the oldest structures in Pittsburgh, Fort Pitt and Fort Duquesne. The Fort Pitt Museum, which is housed in the Monongahela Bastion of Fort Pitt, commemorates the French and Indian War (1754–63), during which the area soon to become Pittsburgh became a major battlefield. It was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1960 for its role in the strategic struggles between Native Americans, French colonists, and British colonists, for control of the Ohio River watershed.[5]

Recreation Edit

Today, the park provides recreational space for workers, visitors, and residents in downtown Pittsburgh, and also acts as the site for major cultural events in the city, including the Venture Outdoors Festival, Three Rivers Arts Festival and Three Rivers Regatta. The park is operated by the Pennsylvania Bureau of State Parks.[6]

Fountain Edit

 
The fountain in Point State Park, which sprays water up to 150 feet (46 m) in the air at the head of the Ohio River.

The location of the fountain at the tip of the Point previously served as a connector for two old bridges, the Manchester Bridge (over the Allegheny River) and Point Bridge (over the Monongahela). Both were removed in 1970 to make way for the fountain.

 
This is the Point in 1951 Pittsburgh showing the Point Bridge II (right) and the Manchester Bridge (left).

In April 2009, the fountain was turned off for a $9.6 million upgrade and refurbishment; it went online again at the opening of the Three Rivers Arts Festival on June 7, 2013.[7]

The fountain also serves as the western terminus for the Great Allegheny Passage, a 150-mile hiker-biker trail beginning at the 184.5 milepost of the Cumberland, MD terminus of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal National Historical Park, which begins in the Georgetown area of Washington, DC, thus forming in total a 350-mile recreational trail between DC and Pittsburgh.

Renovations Edit

 
The underpass under Interstate 279 in the park

On October 11, 2006, Michael DeBerardinis, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, announced a $25 million plan to renovate Point State Park. The plans called for improving the green spaces within the park, expanding recreational opportunities, preserving historical installations, and updating outdated amenities. Those estimated costs grew to a final figure of $36 million [2]. The project was scheduled to be completed within four years, with the majority of the work to be finished in time for Pittsburgh's 250th anniversary celebration in 2008.[8]

Sections of the park had fallen into disuse since it was established in the summer of 1974. The homeless had used the trenches surrounding the foundations of the remains of Fort Pitt as a temporary shelter for years. Graffiti on the structures of the park had become a major problem. Sections of the park were littered with fence posts, cut logs, plastic drums, and rolled up snow drift fencing. The walkways were cracked and beginning to fall apart. The restoration project aimed to reestablish the park as a recreational destination.[8]

Plans for the 2006 improvements to the park included installing new pumps and pipes in the fountain, establishing a seating area around the fountain and a wading area for children, restoring the river walk with steps that lead into the river, building kiosks for information and concessions, renovating the rest rooms, water taxi landings and surrounding docks, and installing wireless internet access hubs.[8]

These plans were not put into place without some controversy. On January 25, 2007, thirteen members of two local labor unions were arrested for blocking access by contractors to the work sites at the remnants of Fort Pitt. The unions were protesting the use of four non-represented workers by the contractor. In addition, advocates for historical preservation disagreed with the decision to bury the remnants of the fort's walls, which could damage the bricks and remove the walls from public access.[9]

Point State Park was reopened to the public in the spring of 2008. The renovation process took a year and a half to complete.[10]

History Edit

French and Indian War Edit

 
Period map showing strategic location of 18th century forts at Forks of the Ohio
 
This map from 1900 demonstrates how densely developed the site became.
 
Brick pavers mark the outline of where Fort Duquesne was located.
 
The Fort Pitt Blockhouse

The confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, creating the Ohio River, has greatly impacted the history of Point State Park. This confluence was referred to as the Forks of the Ohio,[11] which remains the official landmark-designated name for the site. It was once at the center of river travel, trade, and even wars throughout the pioneer history of Western Pennsylvania. During the mid-18th century, the armies of France and the Great Britain carved paths through the wilderness to control the point area and trade on the rivers. The French built Fort Duquesne in 1754 on foundations of Fort Prince George, which had been built by the colonial forces of Virginia.[12]

The French held Fort Duquesne during the French and Indian War, and it became one of the focal points for that war because of its strategic riverside location in disputed territory. The French held the fort successfully early in the war, turning back the 1755 expedition led by General Edward Braddock. A smaller attack by James Grant in September 1758 was repulsed, but with heavy losses. Two months later, on November 25, the Forbes Expedition, under General John Forbes, captured the site after the French destroyed Fort Duquesne the day before. The British built a much larger fort on the site and named it Fort Pitt.[12]

The Forbes Expedition was successful where the Braddock expedition had failed because of the Treaty of Easton, in which local American Indians agreed to abandon their alliance with the French. American Indians, primarily Delawares and Shawnee, made this agreement with the understanding that the British military would leave the area after the war. The Indians did not want British army garrisons in their territory. The British, however, built Fort Pitt on the site, naming it after William Pitt the Elder.[12]

As a result, in 1763 local Delawares and Shawnees took part in Pontiac's Rebellion, an effort to drive the British from the region. The Indians' siege of Fort Pitt began on June 22, 1763, but the fort was too strong to be taken by force. During a diplomatic meeting at the fort, the commander of Fort Pitt Simon Ecuyer gave Delaware Indian emissaries blankets that had been exposed to smallpox in hopes of infecting them, as suggested by trader William Trent. The use of blankets to spread smallpox was discussed and approved the next month between British General Jeffery Amherst and his subordinate Colonel Henry Bouquet, who was marching to Fort Pitt with a force of 460 soldiers.[13] Smallpox was highly contagious among the Native Americans, and — together with measles, influenza, chicken pox, and other Old World diseases — was a major cause of death since the arrival of Europeans and their animals.[14][15][16][17] A reported outbreak that began the spring before left as many as one hundred Native Americans dead in Ohio Country from 1763 to 1764. It is not clear, however, whether the smallpox was a result of the Fort Pitt incident or the virus was already present among the Delaware people as outbreaks happened on their own every dozen or so years[18] and the delegates were met again later and they seemingly had not contracted smallpox.[19][20][21] On August 1, 1763, most of the Indians broke off the siege to intercept an approaching force under Colonel Bouquet, resulting in the Battle of Bushy Run. Bouquet fought off the attack and relieved Fort Pitt on August 20.[12]

After Pontiac's War, Fort Pitt was no longer necessary to the British Crown, and was abandoned to the locals in 1772. At that time, the Pittsburgh area was claimed by both Virginia and Pennsylvania, and a power struggle for the region commenced. Virginians took control of Fort Pitt, and for a brief while in the 1770s it was called Fort Dunmore, in honour of Virginia's Governor Lord Dunmore. The fort was a staging ground in Dunmore's War of 1774.[12]

During the American Revolutionary War, Fort Pitt was the headquarters for the western theatre of the war.[12]

A small brick building called the Blockhouse—actually an outbuilding known as a redoubt—remains in Point State Park, the only intact remnant of Fort Pitt. It was erected in 1764, and is believed to be the oldest building, not only in Pittsburgh, but in Western Pennsylvania. Used for many years as a house, the blockhouse was purchased and has been preserved for many years by the Daughters of the American Revolution, who open it to the public.[12]

Redevelopment Edit

During the city's early history, the Point became a hub for industry and transportation. By the 1930s it was occupied by warehouses and railroad yards. Frank Lloyd Wright commented in 1935 that the city had wasted the potential of its rivers and hilly landscape. In 1945, the situation in this regard was even worse; four years of World War II and eight years of the Great Depression had permitted urban blight to make substantial inroads. The total assessed property value in the Golden Triangle was at a record low and falling. At the point, rarely used railroad facilities included 15 acres (61,000 m2) of yards (60000 m2) and half a mile (800 m) of elevated train tracks.[12]

City leaders wanted to alleviate traffic congestion in the city. The Manchester Bridge and Point Bridge met at the point in a way that left no room for the interchange required by the volume of traffic. The growth of the city had made parking a serious problem as well. Robert Moses, who had developed the traffic scheme for New York City, was brought in and published a traffic plan in 1939. He offered a circular park surrounded by approach roads connecting the bridges to the city. His plan retained the existing bridges, but most of the experts brought in to examine the problem called for the bridges to be relocated away from the Point, creating more space for adjoining access roads and interchanges.

Although the site had substantial problems, Robert Alberts observes that "the condition, in the view of the city planner, was almost perfect". The Point had few property owners who needed to be bought out, few residents who would need relocation, and few structures worth preserving. Architects and planners could treat it as a tabula rasa.[12]

During the course of the Second World War, federal and local authorities established three goals for the site: "the creation of a park commemorating the site's history, improved traffic circulation through the construction of new roads and bridges, and designation of a portion of the site for new office buildings, intended to stimulate private interest in the Golden Triangle". The Allegheny Conference on Community Development became a driving force for these changes. Edgar Kaufmann, a Pittsburgh department store owner, sat on the board of the Conference and became chair of the 28-member committee convened to look into the Point Park problem.[citation needed]

Kaufmann wanted a plan for the Point that was more urban and developed than the park others were imagining. In particular, Kaufmann was a major supporter of Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera and wanted to provide it with a permanent building. He brought in Wright, by that time a preeminent architect, who had done numerous other projects for Kaufmann in the past, including Kaufmann's landmark home at Fallingwater and an unbuilt design for a parking garage.[citation needed]

Plans for Point Park Civic Center fell through and ultimately, the site was turned into a park with historic and recreational aspects, Point State Park. The Fort Pitt blockhouse remained intact, and three of the five bastions of the fort have been restored. The state acquired almost all property for the site by 1949, at a cost of $7,588,500 ($ 93.3 million in 2023); the park was finally completed in August 1974. Areas adjoining the park were condemned to permit commercial development, most notably Gateway Center.

Along the Allegheny Edit

Moving downstream about 100 yards:

Nearby state parks Edit

The following state parks are within 30 miles (48 km) of Point State Park:[22][23][24][25]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Point State Park". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. August 2, 1979. Retrieved May 26, 2008.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  3. ^ . National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved July 2, 2008.
  4. ^ "Point State Park fountain to overflow with renovations". www.postgazette.com.
  5. ^ "NHL nomination for Forks of the Ohio". National Park Service. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
  6. ^ . Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  7. ^ . Editorial. post-gazette.com. Pittsburgh Post Gazette. December 25, 2012. Archived from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved December 21, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c Don Hopey (October 12, 2006). "State will provide $25 million for Point State Park". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  9. ^ Allison M. Heinrichs. . Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Archived from the original on February 7, 2007. Retrieved January 26, 2007.
  10. ^ Mark Belko (May 22, 2008). "Refurbished Point State Park to open May 30". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved May 22, 2008.
  11. ^ Chernow, Ron (October 5, 2010). Washington: A Life. Penguin. ISBN 978-1-59420-266-7. forks of the ohio.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Alberts, Robert C. (1980). The Shaping of the Point: Pittsburgh's Renaissance Park. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0-8229-3422-1.
  13. ^ Crawford, Native Americans of the Pontiac's War, 245–250
  14. ^ Phillip M. White (June 2, 2011). American Indian Chronology: Chronologies of the American Mosaic. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 44.
  15. ^ D. Hank Ellison (August 24, 2007). Handbook of Chemical and Biological Warfare Agents. CRC Press. pp. 123–140. ISBN 978-0-8493-1434-6.
  16. ^ Ann F. Ramenofsky, Vectors of Death: The Archaeology of European Contact (Albuquerque, NM: University of New Mexico Press, 1987):
  17. ^ Robert L. O'Connell, Of Arms and Men: A History of War, Weapons, and Aggression (NY and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989)
  18. ^ King, J. C. H. (2016). Blood and Land: The Story of Native North America. Penguin UK. p. 73. ISBN 9781846148088.
  19. ^ Ranlet, P (2000). "The British, the Indians, and smallpox: what actually happened at Fort Pitt in 1763?". Pennsylvania History. 67 (3): 427–441. PMID 17216901.
  20. ^ Barras V, Greub G (June 2014). "History of biological warfare and bioterrorism". Clinical Microbiology and Infection. 20 (6): 497–502. doi:10.1111/1469-0691.12706. PMID 24894605. However, in the light of contemporary knowledge, it remains doubtful whether his hopes were fulfilled, given the fact that the transmission of smallpox through this kind of vector is much less efficient than respiratory transmission, and that Native Americans had been in contact with smallpox >200 years before Ecuyer's trickery, notably during Pizarro's conquest of South America in the 16th century. As a whole, the analysis of the various 'pre-micro- biological" attempts at BW illustrate the difficulty of differentiating attempted biological attack from naturally occurring epidemics.
  21. ^ Medical Aspects of Biological Warfare. Government Printing Office. 2007. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-16-087238-9. In retrospect, it is difficult to evaluate the tactical success of Captain Ecuyer's biological attack because smallpox may have been transmitted after other contacts with colonists, as had previously happened in New England and the South. Although scabs from smallpox patients are thought to be of low infectivity as a result of binding of the virus in fibrin metric, and transmission by fomites has been considered inefficient compared with respiratory droplet transmission.
  22. ^ . Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Archived from the original on September 24, 2011. Retrieved November 18, 2011.
  23. ^ Michels, Chris (1997). "Latitude/Longitude Distance Calculation". Northern Arizona University. Retrieved April 23, 2008.
  24. ^ . Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Archived from the original on September 30, 2005. Retrieved January 20, 2007.
  25. ^ 2007 General Highway Map Allegheny County Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). 1:65,000. Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau of Planning and Research, Geographic Information Division. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 20, 2011. Retrieved July 27, 2007. Note: shows Point State Park

External links Edit

  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 21, 2013. (220.2 KB)
  • Post Gazette story on the refurbished fountain completed 2011
  • Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. PA-430, "Fort Pitt Blockhouse, 25 Penn Avenue, Point State Historic Park, Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, PA", 3 photos, 4 measured drawings, 4 data pages
  • Pittsburgh Waste Book and Fort Pitt Trading Post Papers published by ULS Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh

point, state, park, locally, known, point, pennsylvania, state, park, which, located, acres, downtown, pittsburgh, allegheny, county, pennsylvania, confluence, allegheny, monongahela, rivers, forming, ohio, river, iucn, category, protected, landscape, seascape. Point State Park locally known as The Point is a Pennsylvania state park which is located on 36 acres 150 000 m2 in Downtown Pittsburgh Allegheny County Pennsylvania USA at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers forming the Ohio River Point State ParkIUCN category V protected landscape seascape Point State Park in FallLocation of Point State Park in PennsylvaniaShow map of PennsylvaniaPoint State Park the United States Show map of the United StatesLocationPittsburgh Allegheny Pennsylvania United StatesCoordinates40 26 30 N 80 00 43 W 40 44167 N 80 01194 W 40 44167 80 01194Area36 acres 15 ha Elevation718 ft 219 m 1 EstablishedAugust 1974 1 Named forthe point of confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers forming the Ohio RiverGoverning bodyPennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural ResourcesWebsitePoint State ParkForks of the OhioU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkMarker denoting the point of confluenceNRHP reference No 66000643 2 Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966Designated NHLOctober 9 1960 3 Built on land that was acquired via eminent domain from industrial enterprises during the 1950s this park opened in August 1974 4 after construction was completed on its iconic fountain Pittsburgh settled on the current design after rejecting an alternative plan for a Point Park Civic Center designed by Frank Lloyd Wright The park also includes the outlines and remains of two of the oldest structures in Pittsburgh Fort Pitt and Fort Duquesne The Fort Pitt Museum which is housed in the Monongahela Bastion of Fort Pitt commemorates the French and Indian War 1754 63 during which the area soon to become Pittsburgh became a major battlefield It was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1960 for its role in the strategic struggles between Native Americans French colonists and British colonists for control of the Ohio River watershed 5 Contents 1 Recreation 2 Fountain 3 Renovations 4 History 4 1 French and Indian War 4 2 Redevelopment 5 Along the Allegheny 6 Nearby state parks 7 References 8 External linksRecreation EditToday the park provides recreational space for workers visitors and residents in downtown Pittsburgh and also acts as the site for major cultural events in the city including the Venture Outdoors Festival Three Rivers Arts Festival and Three Rivers Regatta The park is operated by the Pennsylvania Bureau of State Parks 6 Fountain Edit nbsp The fountain in Point State Park which sprays water up to 150 feet 46 m in the air at the head of the Ohio River The location of the fountain at the tip of the Point previously served as a connector for two old bridges the Manchester Bridge over the Allegheny River and Point Bridge over the Monongahela Both were removed in 1970 to make way for the fountain nbsp This is the Point in 1951 Pittsburgh showing the Point Bridge II right and the Manchester Bridge left In April 2009 the fountain was turned off for a 9 6 million upgrade and refurbishment it went online again at the opening of the Three Rivers Arts Festival on June 7 2013 7 The fountain also serves as the western terminus for the Great Allegheny Passage a 150 mile hiker biker trail beginning at the 184 5 milepost of the Cumberland MD terminus of the Chesapeake amp Ohio Canal National Historical Park which begins in the Georgetown area of Washington DC thus forming in total a 350 mile recreational trail between DC and Pittsburgh Renovations Edit nbsp The underpass under Interstate 279 in the parkOn October 11 2006 Michael DeBerardinis Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources announced a 25 million plan to renovate Point State Park The plans called for improving the green spaces within the park expanding recreational opportunities preserving historical installations and updating outdated amenities Those estimated costs grew to a final figure of 36 million 2 The project was scheduled to be completed within four years with the majority of the work to be finished in time for Pittsburgh s 250th anniversary celebration in 2008 8 Sections of the park had fallen into disuse since it was established in the summer of 1974 The homeless had used the trenches surrounding the foundations of the remains of Fort Pitt as a temporary shelter for years Graffiti on the structures of the park had become a major problem Sections of the park were littered with fence posts cut logs plastic drums and rolled up snow drift fencing The walkways were cracked and beginning to fall apart The restoration project aimed to reestablish the park as a recreational destination 8 Plans for the 2006 improvements to the park included installing new pumps and pipes in the fountain establishing a seating area around the fountain and a wading area for children restoring the river walk with steps that lead into the river building kiosks for information and concessions renovating the rest rooms water taxi landings and surrounding docks and installing wireless internet access hubs 8 These plans were not put into place without some controversy On January 25 2007 thirteen members of two local labor unions were arrested for blocking access by contractors to the work sites at the remnants of Fort Pitt The unions were protesting the use of four non represented workers by the contractor In addition advocates for historical preservation disagreed with the decision to bury the remnants of the fort s walls which could damage the bricks and remove the walls from public access 9 Point State Park was reopened to the public in the spring of 2008 The renovation process took a year and a half to complete 10 History EditFrench and Indian War Edit nbsp Period map showing strategic location of 18th century forts at Forks of the Ohio nbsp This map from 1900 demonstrates how densely developed the site became nbsp Brick pavers mark the outline of where Fort Duquesne was located nbsp The Fort Pitt BlockhouseThe confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers creating the Ohio River has greatly impacted the history of Point State Park This confluence was referred to as the Forks of the Ohio 11 which remains the official landmark designated name for the site It was once at the center of river travel trade and even wars throughout the pioneer history of Western Pennsylvania During the mid 18th century the armies of France and the Great Britain carved paths through the wilderness to control the point area and trade on the rivers The French built Fort Duquesne in 1754 on foundations of Fort Prince George which had been built by the colonial forces of Virginia 12 The French held Fort Duquesne during the French and Indian War and it became one of the focal points for that war because of its strategic riverside location in disputed territory The French held the fort successfully early in the war turning back the 1755 expedition led by General Edward Braddock A smaller attack by James Grant in September 1758 was repulsed but with heavy losses Two months later on November 25 the Forbes Expedition under General John Forbes captured the site after the French destroyed Fort Duquesne the day before The British built a much larger fort on the site and named it Fort Pitt 12 The Forbes Expedition was successful where the Braddock expedition had failed because of the Treaty of Easton in which local American Indians agreed to abandon their alliance with the French American Indians primarily Delawares and Shawnee made this agreement with the understanding that the British military would leave the area after the war The Indians did not want British army garrisons in their territory The British however built Fort Pitt on the site naming it after William Pitt the Elder 12 As a result in 1763 local Delawares and Shawnees took part in Pontiac s Rebellion an effort to drive the British from the region The Indians siege of Fort Pitt began on June 22 1763 but the fort was too strong to be taken by force During a diplomatic meeting at the fort the commander of Fort Pitt Simon Ecuyer gave Delaware Indian emissaries blankets that had been exposed to smallpox in hopes of infecting them as suggested by trader William Trent The use of blankets to spread smallpox was discussed and approved the next month between British General Jeffery Amherst and his subordinate Colonel Henry Bouquet who was marching to Fort Pitt with a force of 460 soldiers 13 Smallpox was highly contagious among the Native Americans and together with measles influenza chicken pox and other Old World diseases was a major cause of death since the arrival of Europeans and their animals 14 15 16 17 A reported outbreak that began the spring before left as many as one hundred Native Americans dead in Ohio Country from 1763 to 1764 It is not clear however whether the smallpox was a result of the Fort Pitt incident or the virus was already present among the Delaware people as outbreaks happened on their own every dozen or so years 18 and the delegates were met again later and they seemingly had not contracted smallpox 19 20 21 On August 1 1763 most of the Indians broke off the siege to intercept an approaching force under Colonel Bouquet resulting in the Battle of Bushy Run Bouquet fought off the attack and relieved Fort Pitt on August 20 12 After Pontiac s War Fort Pitt was no longer necessary to the British Crown and was abandoned to the locals in 1772 At that time the Pittsburgh area was claimed by both Virginia and Pennsylvania and a power struggle for the region commenced Virginians took control of Fort Pitt and for a brief while in the 1770s it was called Fort Dunmore in honour of Virginia s Governor Lord Dunmore The fort was a staging ground in Dunmore s War of 1774 12 During the American Revolutionary War Fort Pitt was the headquarters for the western theatre of the war 12 A small brick building called the Blockhouse actually an outbuilding known as a redoubt remains in Point State Park the only intact remnant of Fort Pitt It was erected in 1764 and is believed to be the oldest building not only in Pittsburgh but in Western Pennsylvania Used for many years as a house the blockhouse was purchased and has been preserved for many years by the Daughters of the American Revolution who open it to the public 12 Redevelopment Edit Main article Point Park Civic Center During the city s early history the Point became a hub for industry and transportation By the 1930s it was occupied by warehouses and railroad yards Frank Lloyd Wright commented in 1935 that the city had wasted the potential of its rivers and hilly landscape In 1945 the situation in this regard was even worse four years of World War II and eight years of the Great Depression had permitted urban blight to make substantial inroads The total assessed property value in the Golden Triangle was at a record low and falling At the point rarely used railroad facilities included 15 acres 61 000 m2 of yards 60000 m2 and half a mile 800 m of elevated train tracks 12 City leaders wanted to alleviate traffic congestion in the city The Manchester Bridge and Point Bridge met at the point in a way that left no room for the interchange required by the volume of traffic The growth of the city had made parking a serious problem as well Robert Moses who had developed the traffic scheme for New York City was brought in and published a traffic plan in 1939 He offered a circular park surrounded by approach roads connecting the bridges to the city His plan retained the existing bridges but most of the experts brought in to examine the problem called for the bridges to be relocated away from the Point creating more space for adjoining access roads and interchanges Although the site had substantial problems Robert Alberts observes that the condition in the view of the city planner was almost perfect The Point had few property owners who needed to be bought out few residents who would need relocation and few structures worth preserving Architects and planners could treat it as a tabula rasa 12 During the course of the Second World War federal and local authorities established three goals for the site the creation of a park commemorating the site s history improved traffic circulation through the construction of new roads and bridges and designation of a portion of the site for new office buildings intended to stimulate private interest in the Golden Triangle The Allegheny Conference on Community Development became a driving force for these changes Edgar Kaufmann a Pittsburgh department store owner sat on the board of the Conference and became chair of the 28 member committee convened to look into the Point Park problem citation needed Kaufmann wanted a plan for the Point that was more urban and developed than the park others were imagining In particular Kaufmann was a major supporter of Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera and wanted to provide it with a permanent building He brought in Wright by that time a preeminent architect who had done numerous other projects for Kaufmann in the past including Kaufmann s landmark home at Fallingwater and an unbuilt design for a parking garage citation needed Plans for Point Park Civic Center fell through and ultimately the site was turned into a park with historic and recreational aspects Point State Park The Fort Pitt blockhouse remained intact and three of the five bastions of the fort have been restored The state acquired almost all property for the site by 1949 at a cost of 7 588 500 93 3 million in 2023 the park was finally completed in August 1974 Areas adjoining the park were condemned to permit commercial development most notably Gateway Center Along the Allegheny EditMoving downstream about 100 yards nbsp Del Monte Foods office building in the background nbsp Heinz Field in the background nbsp Heinz Field and Carnegie Science Center nbsp West End Bridge nbsp At the pointNearby state parks EditThe following state parks are within 30 miles 48 km of Point State Park 22 23 24 25 Allegheny Islands State Park Allegheny County Hillman State Park Washington County Raccoon Creek State Park Beaver County References Edit Point State Park Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey August 2 1979 Retrieved May 26 2008 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 Forks of the Ohio National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved July 2 2008 Point State Park fountain to overflow with renovations www postgazette com NHL nomination for Forks of the Ohio National Park Service Retrieved April 7 2017 Point State Park Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Archived from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved October 5 2011 A gem restored Pittsburgh can rejoice over its iconic fountain Editorial post gazette com Pittsburgh Post Gazette December 25 2012 Archived from the original on January 6 2013 Retrieved December 21 2021 a b c Don Hopey October 12 2006 State will provide 25 million for Point State Park Pittsburgh Post Gazette Allison M Heinrichs 13 arrested at Point State Park Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on February 7 2007 Retrieved January 26 2007 Mark Belko May 22 2008 Refurbished Point State Park to open May 30 Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved May 22 2008 Chernow Ron October 5 2010 Washington A Life Penguin ISBN 978 1 59420 266 7 forks of the ohio a b c d e f g h i Alberts Robert C 1980 The Shaping of the Point Pittsburgh s Renaissance Park Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 3422 1 Crawford Native Americans of the Pontiac s War 245 250 Phillip M White June 2 2011 American Indian Chronology Chronologies of the American Mosaic Greenwood Publishing Group p 44 D Hank Ellison August 24 2007 Handbook of Chemical and Biological Warfare Agents CRC Press pp 123 140 ISBN 978 0 8493 1434 6 Ann F Ramenofsky Vectors of Death The Archaeology of European Contact Albuquerque NM University of New Mexico Press 1987 Robert L O Connell Of Arms and Men A History of War Weapons and Aggression NY and Oxford Oxford University Press 1989 King J C H 2016 Blood and Land The Story of Native North America Penguin UK p 73 ISBN 9781846148088 Ranlet P 2000 The British the Indians and smallpox what actually happened at Fort Pitt in 1763 Pennsylvania History 67 3 427 441 PMID 17216901 Barras V Greub G June 2014 History of biological warfare and bioterrorism Clinical Microbiology and Infection 20 6 497 502 doi 10 1111 1469 0691 12706 PMID 24894605 However in the light of contemporary knowledge it remains doubtful whether his hopes were fulfilled given the fact that the transmission of smallpox through this kind of vector is much less efficient than respiratory transmission and that Native Americans had been in contact with smallpox gt 200 years before Ecuyer s trickery notably during Pizarro s conquest of South America in the 16th century As a whole the analysis of the various pre micro biological attempts at BW illustrate the difficulty of differentiating attempted biological attack from naturally occurring epidemics Medical Aspects of Biological Warfare Government Printing Office 2007 p 3 ISBN 978 0 16 087238 9 In retrospect it is difficult to evaluate the tactical success of Captain Ecuyer s biological attack because smallpox may have been transmitted after other contacts with colonists as had previously happened in New England and the South Although scabs from smallpox patients are thought to be of low infectivity as a result of binding of the virus in fibrin metric and transmission by fomites has been considered inefficient compared with respiratory droplet transmission Find a Park by Region interactive map Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Archived from the original on September 24 2011 Retrieved November 18 2011 Michels Chris 1997 Latitude Longitude Distance Calculation Northern Arizona University Retrieved April 23 2008 Find a Park Pittsburgh and its Countryside Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Archived from the original on September 30 2005 Retrieved January 20 2007 2007 General Highway Map Allegheny County Pennsylvania PDF Map 1 65 000 Pennsylvania Department of Transportation Bureau of Planning and Research Geographic Information Division Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2011 Retrieved July 27 2007 Note shows Point State ParkExternal links Edit nbsp Pennsylvania portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Point State Park Point State Park official map PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 21 2013 220 2 KB Post Gazette story on the refurbished fountain completed 2011 Historic American Buildings Survey HABS No PA 430 Fort Pitt Blockhouse 25 Penn Avenue Point State Historic Park Pittsburgh Allegheny County PA 3 photos 4 measured drawings 4 data pages Pittsburgh Waste Book and Fort Pitt Trading Post Papers published by ULS Archives Service Center University of Pittsburgh Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Point State Park amp oldid 1170554331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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