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Squirrel Hill

Squirrel Hill is a residential neighborhood in the East End of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. The city officially divides it into two neighborhoods, Squirrel Hill North and Squirrel Hill South, but it is almost universally treated as a single neighborhood.

Squirrel Hill
Murray Avenue in Squirrel Hill in 2005
Location within the city of Pittsburgh
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
CountyAllegheny County
CityPittsburgh
Area
 • Total3.89 sq mi (10.1 km2)
Population
 • Total26,473
 • Density6,800/sq mi (2,600/km2)
Squirrel Hill North
Area
 • Total1.222 sq mi (3.16 km2)
Population
 (2010)[2]
 • Total11,363
 • Density9,300/sq mi (3,600/km2)
Squirrel Hill South
Area
 • Total2.671 sq mi (6.92 km2)
Population
 (2010)[2]
 • Total15,110
 • Density5,700/sq mi (2,200/km2)
Murray Hill Avenue Historic District
Location1010–1201 Murray Hill Avenue (Squirrel Hill), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Coordinates40°26′59″N 79°55′41″W / 40.449669°N 79.928119°W / 40.449669; -79.928119
CPHD designatedApril 3, 2000[3]
PHLF designated2004[4]

Geography edit

Squirrel Hill is located at 40°26′17″N 79°55′23″W / 40.438072°N 79.922972°W / 40.438072; -79.922972 and has two ZIP codes: 15217 and 15232.

Surrounding neighborhoods edit

Squirrel Hill North has five borders with the Pittsburgh neighborhoods of Shadyside to the north, Point Breeze to the east, Squirrel Hill South to the south, Central Oakland to the southwest and North Oakland to the west.

Squirrel Hill South has nine land borders with the Pittsburgh neighborhoods of Squirrel Hill North to the north and northwest, Point Breeze to the northeast, Regent Square to the east, Swisshelm Park to the southeast, Glen Hazel and Hazelwood to the south-southwest, Greenfield to the southwest, and South Oakland and Central Oakland to the west. Across the Monongahela River to the south-southeast, Squirrel Hill South runs adjacent to Homestead.

Demographics edit

As of the 2010 Census,[5] Squirrel Hill North has a population of 11,363, having grown 9% since 2000. Squirrel Hill North's population is 75% White, 17% Asian, 4% Hispanic, and 3% Black. Of the 3,892 housing units in Squirrel Hill North, 93% are occupied.

Squirrel Hill South has a population of 15,110, up 4% since 2000, of whom 82% are White, 11% are Asian, 3% are Hispanic, and 3% are Black. There are 7,514 housing units which have a 95% occupancy rate.

In 2010, about 40% of Squirrel Hill's residents were Jewish.[6] According to a 2002 study by the United Jewish Federation, 33% of the Jewish population of Greater Pittsburgh lives in Squirrel Hill, and another 14% lives in the surrounding neighborhoods.[7] The report states that: "The stability of Squirrel Hill, a geographic hub of the Jewish community located within the city limits, is unique in North America."

Asian/Chinese community edit

Per the October 17, 2019 issue of Pittsburgh Magazine, the area is also becoming Pittsburgh's new Chinatown with an influx of mainland Chinese students from Carnegie Mellon University.[8] The area celebrates Chinese New Year annually with a parade.[9] The area as of 2017 was about 17% Asian.[10]

History edit

Origins edit

The name "Squirrel Hill" may have been given to the area by the Native Americans who lived in its vicinity.[11] The neighborhood most likely was named for the abundance of black squirrels.[12]

The growth and development of Squirrel Hill was initially focused on the riverfront along the Monongahela River. The first recorded house was built in 1760 by a soldier at nearby Fort Pitt, Colonel James Burd, at a place called Summerset on the Monongahela River. Squirrel Hill's next house was built by Ambrose Newton some time in the 1760s. This house is still standing and is located in what is now Schenley Park along Overlook Drive (near the ice skating rink). Its first "business district" was the intersection of Brown's Hill Road and Beechwood Boulevard.

In 1778, John Turner built his estate of Federal Hill nearby (along what is now Beechwood Boulevard). He later established the Turner cemetery in 1838 inside his estate, which he donated to the local community when he died in 1840.[11] This cemetery holds the remains of many of the original settlers of Squirrel Hill. The Mary S. Brown Memorial Methodist church was also built on adjoining lands donated by Turner. This church was rebuilt several times, but the current building, which dates from 1908, is the oldest standing church in Squirrel Hill.[13]

The third house in Squirrel Hill, Neill Log House, was built by Robert Neill around 1765, also in what is now Schenley Park. This house still exists and is occasionally open to the public. The Neills owned 262 acres (1.06 km2) of land in the northern section of Schenley Park. In 1795, the Neills moved from this house to a location in what is now Market Square in downtown Pittsburgh. After they died, the house was handed down to two different people before it was sold to General James O'Hara. O'Hara's granddaughter, Mary Schenley, gave the property to the city of Pittsburgh in 1889. For a time, the house was rented out by the city to vacationers, but by 1969, the house was in such poor condition that it was dismantled and rebuilt by the Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation. It still exists and is open for tours during the Vintage Grand Prix in July.

Around 1820, William "Killymoon" Stewart built one of the first tavern/inns in the area. His tavern, located near the intersection of Beechwood and Brown's Hill Road, survived for over 100 years. Slowly, Squirrel Hill became a prosperous and affluent suburb.

Around 1840,[14] the Murdoch family started[15][16] a farm and nursery business in the part of Squirrel Hill North which is known today as Murdoch Farms.[17][18][19] Today, this quiet area contains many upscale homes.

By the 1860s, the area along Fifth Avenue near Woodland Road had several mansions, including Willow Cottage. The cottage was built by the industrialist and civic leader Thomas M. Howe, a bank president and member of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1851 to 1855. Though neglected for many years and almost torn down, Willow Cottage has recently undergone a $2.2 million restoration and renovation into a Chatham University gatehouse and guesthouse.

Civil War edit

On December 24, 1860, protests broke out in the streets of Squirrel Hill after news arrived that the U.S. Secretary of War, John B. Floyd had ordered 124 cannons to be shipped from Allegheny Arsenal to two forts under construction in Louisiana and Texas.[20] The inhabitants of Pittsburgh predicted that these weapons would be used against them if the South seceded, and this did indeed happen at Fort Sumter.[21]

Incorporation into Pittsburgh edit

 
Murray Avenue in Squirrel Hill, looking north near Darlington Road, circa 1937. The electric trolley lines are clearly visible running down the center of the street.

Prior to 1868, the Squirrel Hill area was part of Peebles Township. This changed in 1868, when the area was annexed to the city of Pittsburgh.

Following the Civil War, several of Pittsburgh's richest families built multiple houses in the Woodland Road area between Fifth and Wilkins Avenues. In 1869, a women's college, the predecessor to Chatham University, was established nearby. Today, Chatham University owns several of these large houses.

In 1869, the clubhouse of the Pittsburgh Golf Club was built at the new Schenley Park Golf Course (The present building by Alden and Harlow was constructed in 1900.) In 1876, the Homewood Cemetery was established on 176 acres (0.71 km2) of land in Squirrel Hill.[11]

Over the course of the 19th century, the focus of Squirrel Hill shifted from its riverfront at the Monongahela River to the area closest to Oakland and Shadyside. Ebdy's orchard was located near Shady Avenue and Murdoch's farm, known for its flowers, fruit trees, and vegetable trees was located on the hill above Oakland. By the late 1800s, the building of trolley lines caused a migration of wealthy executives outwards toward country estates and workers inward toward trolley lines. Farms were sold, and divided for new housing developments.[22]

 
Inside the Squirrel Hill Tunnel, which runs underneath the southern half of Squirrel Hill

The growth of Squirrel Hill accelerated when an electric trolley was installed in 1893.[11] The trolley line ran via Forbes Avenue and Murray Avenue, terminating in Homestead. The trolley line facilitated the building of hundreds of houses for the middle management of local factories, especially on Shady and Denniston Avenues near Aylesboro. Despite its trolley line, Murray Avenue remained a dirt road until 1920. Murray Avenue carried three Pittsburgh Railways trolley lines (#69 Squirrel Hill, #60 East Liberty-Homestead and #68 Homestead-Duquesne-Kennywood-McKeesport) until 1958 when the trolleys were replaced by buses. Bus routes 61A, 61B, 61C, 61D, 64, 67, and 69 pass through the area today.

Squirrel Hill grew even more with the opening of the Boulevard of the Allies in 1927, providing a direct link to downtown Pittsburgh. By the 1930s, most of the available land in Squirrel Hill had been filled.

In 1953, the Parkway and Squirrel Hill Tunnel were opened. They gave the area easier and quicker access from surrounding neighborhoods.[11]

Cultural life edit

Squirrel Hill's business area along Forbes and Murray avenues is referred to as "upstreet" (a contraction of "up the street") by locals. In addition to the many retail businesses in the neighborhood, there are a number of longtime, non-profit organizations, including a branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, the Jewish Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh,[23] the Jewish Family & Children's Service of Pittsburgh,[23][24] the Children's Institute of Pittsburgh,[23] and the Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition.[25] Many annual events are hosted in Squirrel Hill by various community organizations.

Parks edit

 
Chatham University Arboretum, located in the north of Squirrel Hill

Squirrel Hill contains several nature-related points of interest. They include the Chatham University Arboretum, originally belonging to Andrew Mellon; Schenley Park; and Frick Park.

In 1889, Schenley Park was established on land donated from Mary Schenley, whose grandfather had been the owner of considerable amounts of land in the area. The original size of the park was 120 acres (0.49 km2), though it eventually expanded to 456 acres (1.85 km2) over the years.[11]

When Henry Clay Frick died in 1919, he bequeathed 150 acres (0.61 km2) of undeveloped land to the City of Pittsburgh for use as a public park. He provided a $2 million trust fund to assist with the maintenance of the park. Frick Park on the eastern border of the Squirrel Hill neighborhood opened in 1927. Between 1919 and 1942, money from the trust fund was used to enlarge the park, increasing its size to almost 600 acres (2.4 km2). In February 2004, Frick Park grew with the addition of the Nine Mile Run stream restoration area which flows to the Monongahela River. The United States Army Corps of Engineers managed the restoration funded with $5 million in federal money and $2.7 million raised by the city.[26] The restoration was completed in 2006.

Jewish community edit

The origins of Squirrel Hill's Jewish community dates from the 1920s when Eastern European Jews began to move to the neighborhood in large numbers from Oakland and the Hill District. Many of them took up residence in rows of brick houses on the cross streets of Murray Avenue south of Forbes, such as Darlington Road, Bartlett Street, and Beacon Street. The neighborhood became the center of Jewish culture in the city, with kosher butcher shops, delicatessens, Jewish restaurants, bookstores, and designer boutiques. Several hundred Russian Jewish immigrants moved to the neighborhood in the 1990s.[6]

A 2017 study of the Greater Pittsburgh Jewish community, conducted by researchers at Brandeis University and commissioned by the local Jewish Federation, found that 26% of Pittsburgh-area Jews live in Squirrel Hill, 20% live in the South Hills, 9% live in the North Hills, 31% live in other areas of Pittsburgh, and 14% live in other areas of the region. Although Squirrel Hill remains the traditional center of Jewish life in the region, the study found a shift to more suburban areas. The study also found an increase in the population of Jews who identify as Orthodox or secular, and a decrease in the number of Jews who identify as Conservative and Reform denominations.[27] This feature of Squirrel Hill and surrounding Jewish communities, sustained locations of Jewish life across time and denominations, makes the area unusual compared to Jewish life in other cities. Elsewhere, Jews tended to migrate in waves to suburban areas during the twentieth century, and more geographic separation exists between denominations compared to Pittsburgh.[28]

All of Squirrel Hill, as well as much of the neighboring neighborhoods of Greenfield and Regent Square, is within an eruv, a symbolic enclosure that allows Orthodox Jews to push or carry items on Shabbat (the Jewish sabbath, in which no work is traditionally done).[29] The irregular boundaries of the eruv are such that, as one writer noted, "an Orthodox Jew could carry something within the eruv's boundaries all the way from the north end of the Hot Metal Bridge to the intersection of Wilkins and South Dallas in Point Breeze."[30]

Squirrel Hill contains three Jewish day schools: two are affiliated with the Chabad and Modern Orthodox movements, respectively,[31][32] while Community Day School is a co-ed, independent Jewish day school in the neighborhood that attracts families across the wide spectrum of Jewish belief and practice.[33]

Antisemitic attacks edit

On April 17, 1986, Neal Rosenblum, a 24-year-old rabbinical student visiting from Toronto, was shot and killed near his in-laws' house in Squirrel Hill.[34] A suspect, 45-year-old Steven M. Tielsch, was arrested in 2000[34] after bragging to a fellow prison inmate that he had killed a Jew.[35] Tielsch's first three trials ended in a deadlocked jury; he was convicted of third-degree murder in a fourth trial in 2002.[36] The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upheld the decision in 2007.[36]

On October 27, 2018, Robert Bowers entered the Tree of Life – Or L'Simcha synagogue during Shabbat morning services and opened fire, killing 11 people and injuring six, including four police officers.[37]

Education edit

 
Carnegie Mellon University

Public schools edit

The Free Public School Act of 1834 ordered school districts not only to establish free schools but also to establish them in townships outside city limits.[38] This affected Squirrel Hill, since it was part of Peebles Township at the time.

John Turner, who never learned to read or write but became a wealthy landowner, left land and money to the community to build a school when he died in 1844 at the age of 83. It was called Squirrel Hill School and was located on Bigelow Street at Hazelwood Avenue in the Greenfield neighborhood. Its successor closed in 1915 and was replaced by Roosevelt School, named for then-president Theodore Roosevelt. It closed in 1957. It was replaced by John Minadeo Elementary School, named for a ninth-grade school crossing guard who gave his life to save a group of young students in the path of a runaway car near Gladstone School.[39][40]

 
The Wightman School closed in 1980, and the building is now used as a community center.

After Peebles Township was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1868, Squirrel Hill became the Colfax School District, named for Schuyler Colfax, who was Vice President of the United States under President Ulysses S. Grant. The district had five numbered schools. Colfax No. 1 was located at Phillips Avenue and Beechwood Boulevard. Today, it is Pittsburgh Colfax K-8. Colfax No. 2 was on Beechwood Boulevard near the intersection of Saline Street and Hazelwood Avenue near Browns Hill Road. It closed in 1907 but was reopened in 1916 as the Roosevelt School Annex when Roosevelt became overcrowded. The annex closed in 1939. Colfax No. 3, on Forward Avenue, became Forward Avenue School and was named after Walter Forward, who was appointed U.S. Secretary of the Treasury by President John Tyler. The school was torn down in 1923, but its retaining wall still exists under the Parkway East bridge over Saline Street. Colfax No. 4, at Whipple and Commercial streets, became Swisshelm School and was named for Jane Swisshelm, a writer and abolitionist. Colfax No. 5, at Solway and Wightman streets, became Wightman School and was named for Thomas Wightman, owner of the Thomas Wightman Glass Company. Wightman operated as a school from 1897 to 1980 and since then has been used as a community center building and the home of Carriage House Children's Center. The building underwent extensive restoration and remodeling to make it one of only two older buildings in Western Pennsylvania to have LEED Gold certification.[40]

 
Taylor Allderdice High School

Two other public elementary schools existed in Squirrel Hill. Brown School was built near the Monongahela River in 1888 on land donated by the Brown family. It closed in 1932. H.B. Davis School, named for a principal of the Frick Training School for Teachers, was located on Phillips Avenue. It opened in 1931 and closed in 1980.[41]

Squirrel Hill's Taylor Allderdice High School opened in 1927.[42] It was named for the president of the National Tube Company, who was also a member of the Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Education, which was created in 1911 and given jurisdiction over all the public schools in the city, including those in Squirrel Hill.[40]

Private schools edit

Some private schools located in Squirrel Hill are St. Edmund's Academy, a private nonsectarian (formerly Episcopal) elementary school; Community Day School, a co-ed, independent Jewish day school for students ages 3 to grade 8; Hillel Academy of Pittsburgh; and Yeshiva Schools of Pittsburgh. The Day School at the Children's Institute of Pittsburgh serves children with a wide range of special needs.

Higher education edit

Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) and Chatham University are located in Squirrel Hill, although many of CMU's buildings are in Oakland. CMU borders Pittsburgh's Oakland neighborhood, while Chatham borders Shadyside.

Local government edit

The neighborhood is represented on Pittsburgh City Council by Corey O'Connor (District 5, Squirrel Hill South) and Erika Strassburger (District 8, Squirrel Hill North).

Notable people edit

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b c (PDF). Pittsburgh Department of City Planning. January 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2007. Retrieved July 19, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c . Pittsburgh Department of City Planning. Archived from the original on November 5, 2012. Retrieved October 28, 2012. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ (PDF). City of Pittsburgh Historic Review Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 8, 2010. Retrieved January 6, 2010.
  4. ^ Historic Landmark Plaques 1968–2009 (PDF). Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation. 2010. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
  5. ^ Pghsnap November 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ a b Ansberry, Clare (July 2, 2010). "Diverse Views on Israel Emerge in Jewish Enclave". Wall Street Journal.
  7. ^ The 2002 Pittsburgh Jewish Community Study July 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "The Fight to Recognize Pittsburgh's Lost Chinatown". October 17, 2019.
  9. ^ "Chinese Lunar New Year Parade kicks off Year of the Pig in Squirrel Hill".
  10. ^ "Increase In Asian Population Is Changing Region Culturally, Economically". November 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Ehrmann, Michael (Winter 2009). (PDF). Squirrel Hill Magazine. Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 25, 2011.
  12. ^ Bloom, Albert W. (January 14, 1953). "Pittsburgh today made up of many villages". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 23. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  13. ^ Brief History of the Turner Cemetery, Retrieved October 29, 2012.
  14. ^ Joseph F. McFarland. "William B. Murdoch - Washington County, PA Biographies". www.onlinebiographies.info.
  15. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 15, 2014. Retrieved September 15, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. ^ "murdochgardens.com". www.murdochgardens.com.
  17. ^ Lillian Thomas. "Pittsburgh plays the name game". old.post-gazette.com.
  18. ^ "Relocating to Pittsburgh from San Francisco (Advice Needed) (York, Washington: homes, job outlook) - Pennsylvania (PA) - Page 5 - City-Data Forum". www.city-data.com.
  19. ^ "Squirrel Hill Historical Society". Squirrel Hill Historical Society.
  20. ^ Guns for the Union September 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, by Jim Wudarczyk. Lawrenceville Historical Society website, retrieved November 8, 2012.
  21. ^ Wilson, Helen (Winter 2011). (PDF). Squirrel Hill Magazine. Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 24, 2012.
  22. ^ Wilson, Helen (Fall 2011). (PDF). Squirrel Hill Magazine. Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 18, 2014.
  23. ^ a b c Serving One and All: A History of Social Services in Squirrel Hill March 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine By Emily Leon, Winter 2011
  24. ^ Vancheri, Barbara (May 12, 1988). "Low-profile Jewish agency marks 50 years of family service". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  25. ^ Luce Angell, Kate (August 7, 2008). "Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition to spread word about efforts through magazine". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  26. ^ Project to enliven Nine Mile Run, add 550 acres (2.2 km2) to Frick Park By Joe Smydo, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette February 29, 2004
  27. ^ Report: Pittsburgh Jewish community growing, spreading out, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (February 20, 2018).
  28. ^ Oppenheimer, Mark (2021). Squirrel Hill : the Tree of Life Synagogue shooting and the soul of a neighborhood. New York. p. 150. ISBN 9780525657194.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  29. ^ Boundless commitment keeps Pittsburgh's eruv boundary in check, Pittsburg Jewish Chronicle (April 8, 2015).
  30. ^ Potter, Chris (September 14, 2006). "Is there a wall around Squirrel Hill?". Pittsburgh City Paper. Vol. 16, no. 38. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  31. ^ "Yeshiva Schools and Lubavitch Center of Pittsburgh". www.yeshivaschool.com. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  32. ^ "Hillel Academy of Pittsburgh". Hillel Academy of Pittsburgh. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  33. ^ "Home Page - Community Day School". comday.org. Retrieved November 18, 2015.
  34. ^ a b Argento, Mike (October 28, 2018). "A people raised in violence had found peace in Squirrel Hill before synagogue mass shooting". York Daily Record. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  35. ^ Fattal, Isabel (October 28, 2018). "A Brief History of Anti-Semitic Violence in America". The Atlantic. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  36. ^ a b "Pittsburgh, PA - Conviction Upheld in Murder of Yeshiva Student". Vosizneias. August 26, 2007. Retrieved October 28, 2018.
  37. ^ "Hate crime charges filed in Pittsburgh synagogue shooting that left 11 dead". CNN. October 27, 2018. Retrieved October 27, 2018.
  38. ^ "The Fight For Free Schools In Pennsylvania". Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  39. ^ Bukk, Bob (March 30, 2012). "The Next Page / A Pittsburgh hero: John Minadeo". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  40. ^ a b c Wilson, Helen (Spring 2011). "The Education of Squirrel Hill" (PDF). Squirrel Hill Magazine. Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition.[dead link]
  41. ^ "City schools cut 51 jobs from payroll". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. May 28, 1981.
  42. ^ . Quick Facts. Pittsburgh Public Schools. Archived from the original on September 10, 2012. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  43. ^ Hecht, Steve (August 27, 2009). "Comedian Marty Allen part of Allderdice's first hall class". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on February 2, 2014. Retrieved January 28, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  45. ^ Uhl, Sherley (November 5, 1985). "Voter turnout light in quiet election". The Pittsburgh Press.
  46. ^ Iskovitz, Mark. "Squirrel Hill History". A Pittsburgh Neighborhood. Squirrel Hill Historical Society. Retrieved January 13, 2013.
  47. ^ "Here They All Come". The Pittsburgh Press. June 1, 1979. Page 4. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
  48. ^ "Morning Briefing: Cycling". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. July 31, 1999. Page 34. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
  49. ^ Dubner, Stephen J. (2009). Confessions of a Hero-Worshiper. HarperCollins. p. 140. ISBN 978-0061132988.
  50. ^ Hoover, Bob (May 20, 1999). "Author's spin tales of life's lessons". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  51. ^ Cohen, Harold V. (April 1, 1963). "At Random: Way Down East". The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved October 24, 2017.
  52. ^ Fineman, Howard (January 27, 2005). "Lessons in unity from Pittsburgh". MSNBC. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  53. ^ Vondas, Jerry (March 15, 2008). "Dedicated pathologist made mark in his field". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  54. ^ Mervis, Scott (October 11, 2012). "Gary Graff: Rock 'n' roll observer". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  55. ^ Owen, Rob (July 20, 2005). "Funny business". The Toledo Blade.
  56. ^ Owen, Rob (March 19, 2000). . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived from the original on January 6, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  57. ^ Hayes, John (April 27, 2001). . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived from the original on January 6, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  58. ^ a b Rawson, Christopher (August 22, 2007). "Two Marshalls win Governor's Awards for the Arts". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  59. ^ Langley, Karen (October 3, 2012). "Pa. voters won't need to show photo ID". The Toledo Blade.
  60. ^ https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/mac-miller Mac Miller, Jewish Virtual Library
  61. ^ Owen, Rob (February 28, 2003). . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived from the original on January 6, 2022. Retrieved January 14, 2013.
  62. ^ Crowther-Heyck, Hunter (2005). Herbert A. Simon: The Bounds of Reason in Modern America. The Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 141–42. ISBN 0801880254.
  63. ^ Tabachnick, Toby (October 27, 2017). "Times opinion editor, 'Burgh native Bari Weiss, talks "news, Jews and views"". Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle. Vol. 60, no. 43. p. 1,16. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  64. ^ Feldman, Jacqueline (March 30, 2012). "Gay marriage advocate sees Pa. lagging behind". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Further reading edit

  • Toker, Franklin (1994) [1986]. Pittsburgh: An Urban Portrait. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0-8229-5434-6.
  • Squirrel Hill Historical Society (2005). Images of America – Squirrel Hill. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-3717-9.
  • History of the JCC Pittsburgh

External links edit

  • Historic Pittsburgh map collections
    • 1872 – Atlas of the Cities of Pittsburgh, Allegheny and Adjoining Boroughs: Plate 12
    • 1904 – Volume 1 – East End of Pittsburgh (South): Wards 13, 14, 22, and 23
    • 1923 – Volume 2 – East End (South): Wards 7 and 14–15
    • 1939 – Volume 2 – East End (South): Wards 7, 14 and 15

squirrel, hill, neighborhood, philadelphia, philadelphia, archaeological, site, east, pittsburgh, site, residential, neighborhood, east, pittsburgh, pennsylvania, united, states, city, officially, divides, into, neighborhoods, north, south, almost, universally. For the neighborhood in Philadelphia see Squirrel Hill Philadelphia For the archaeological site east of Pittsburgh see Squirrel Hill Site Squirrel Hill is a residential neighborhood in the East End of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States The city officially divides it into two neighborhoods Squirrel Hill North and Squirrel Hill South but it is almost universally treated as a single neighborhood Squirrel HillNeighborhood of PittsburghMurray Avenue in Squirrel Hill in 2005Location within the city of PittsburghCountry United StatesState PennsylvaniaCountyAllegheny CountyCityPittsburghArea 1 Total3 89 sq mi 10 1 km2 Population 2 Total26 473 Density6 800 sq mi 2 600 km2 Squirrel Hill NorthNeighborhood of PittsburghArea 1 Total1 222 sq mi 3 16 km2 Population 2010 2 Total11 363 Density9 300 sq mi 3 600 km2 Squirrel Hill SouthNeighborhood of PittsburghArea 1 Total2 671 sq mi 6 92 km2 Population 2010 2 Total15 110 Density5 700 sq mi 2 200 km2 Murray Hill Avenue Historic DistrictCity of Pittsburgh Historic DistrictPittsburgh Landmark PHLFLocation1010 1201 Murray Hill Avenue Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USACoordinates40 26 59 N 79 55 41 W 40 449669 N 79 928119 W 40 449669 79 928119CPHD designatedApril 3 2000 3 PHLF designated2004 4 Contents 1 Geography 2 Surrounding neighborhoods 3 Demographics 3 1 Asian Chinese community 4 History 4 1 Origins 4 1 1 Civil War 4 1 2 Incorporation into Pittsburgh 5 Cultural life 6 Parks 7 Jewish community 7 1 Antisemitic attacks 8 Education 8 1 Public schools 8 2 Private schools 8 3 Higher education 9 Local government 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 Notes and references 12 1 Further reading 13 External linksGeography editSquirrel Hill is located at 40 26 17 N 79 55 23 W 40 438072 N 79 922972 W 40 438072 79 922972 and has two ZIP codes 15217 and 15232 Surrounding neighborhoods editSquirrel Hill North has five borders with the Pittsburgh neighborhoods of Shadyside to the north Point Breeze to the east Squirrel Hill South to the south Central Oakland to the southwest and North Oakland to the west Squirrel Hill South has nine land borders with the Pittsburgh neighborhoods of Squirrel Hill North to the north and northwest Point Breeze to the northeast Regent Square to the east Swisshelm Park to the southeast Glen Hazel and Hazelwood to the south southwest Greenfield to the southwest and South Oakland and Central Oakland to the west Across the Monongahela River to the south southeast Squirrel Hill South runs adjacent to Homestead Demographics editAs of the 2010 Census 5 Squirrel Hill North has a population of 11 363 having grown 9 since 2000 Squirrel Hill North s population is 75 White 17 Asian 4 Hispanic and 3 Black Of the 3 892 housing units in Squirrel Hill North 93 are occupied Squirrel Hill South has a population of 15 110 up 4 since 2000 of whom 82 are White 11 are Asian 3 are Hispanic and 3 are Black There are 7 514 housing units which have a 95 occupancy rate In 2010 about 40 of Squirrel Hill s residents were Jewish 6 According to a 2002 study by the United Jewish Federation 33 of the Jewish population of Greater Pittsburgh lives in Squirrel Hill and another 14 lives in the surrounding neighborhoods 7 The report states that The stability of Squirrel Hill a geographic hub of the Jewish community located within the city limits is unique in North America Asian Chinese community edit Per the October 17 2019 issue of Pittsburgh Magazine the area is also becoming Pittsburgh s new Chinatown with an influx of mainland Chinese students from Carnegie Mellon University 8 The area celebrates Chinese New Year annually with a parade 9 The area as of 2017 was about 17 Asian 10 History editOrigins edit The name Squirrel Hill may have been given to the area by the Native Americans who lived in its vicinity 11 The neighborhood most likely was named for the abundance of black squirrels 12 The growth and development of Squirrel Hill was initially focused on the riverfront along the Monongahela River The first recorded house was built in 1760 by a soldier at nearby Fort Pitt Colonel James Burd at a place called Summerset on the Monongahela River Squirrel Hill s next house was built by Ambrose Newton some time in the 1760s This house is still standing and is located in what is now Schenley Park along Overlook Drive near the ice skating rink Its first business district was the intersection of Brown s Hill Road and Beechwood Boulevard In 1778 John Turner built his estate of Federal Hill nearby along what is now Beechwood Boulevard He later established the Turner cemetery in 1838 inside his estate which he donated to the local community when he died in 1840 11 This cemetery holds the remains of many of the original settlers of Squirrel Hill The Mary S Brown Memorial Methodist church was also built on adjoining lands donated by Turner This church was rebuilt several times but the current building which dates from 1908 is the oldest standing church in Squirrel Hill 13 The third house in Squirrel Hill Neill Log House was built by Robert Neill around 1765 also in what is now Schenley Park This house still exists and is occasionally open to the public The Neills owned 262 acres 1 06 km2 of land in the northern section of Schenley Park In 1795 the Neills moved from this house to a location in what is now Market Square in downtown Pittsburgh After they died the house was handed down to two different people before it was sold to General James O Hara O Hara s granddaughter Mary Schenley gave the property to the city of Pittsburgh in 1889 For a time the house was rented out by the city to vacationers but by 1969 the house was in such poor condition that it was dismantled and rebuilt by the Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation It still exists and is open for tours during the Vintage Grand Prix in July Around 1820 William Killymoon Stewart built one of the first tavern inns in the area His tavern located near the intersection of Beechwood and Brown s Hill Road survived for over 100 years Slowly Squirrel Hill became a prosperous and affluent suburb Around 1840 14 the Murdoch family started 15 16 a farm and nursery business in the part of Squirrel Hill North which is known today as Murdoch Farms 17 18 19 Today this quiet area contains many upscale homes By the 1860s the area along Fifth Avenue near Woodland Road had several mansions including Willow Cottage The cottage was built by the industrialist and civic leader Thomas M Howe a bank president and member of the U S House of Representatives from 1851 to 1855 Though neglected for many years and almost torn down Willow Cottage has recently undergone a 2 2 million restoration and renovation into a Chatham University gatehouse and guesthouse Civil War edit On December 24 1860 protests broke out in the streets of Squirrel Hill after news arrived that the U S Secretary of War John B Floyd had ordered 124 cannons to be shipped from Allegheny Arsenal to two forts under construction in Louisiana and Texas 20 The inhabitants of Pittsburgh predicted that these weapons would be used against them if the South seceded and this did indeed happen at Fort Sumter 21 Incorporation into Pittsburgh edit nbsp Murray Avenue in Squirrel Hill looking north near Darlington Road circa 1937 The electric trolley lines are clearly visible running down the center of the street Prior to 1868 the Squirrel Hill area was part of Peebles Township This changed in 1868 when the area was annexed to the city of Pittsburgh Following the Civil War several of Pittsburgh s richest families built multiple houses in the Woodland Road area between Fifth and Wilkins Avenues In 1869 a women s college the predecessor to Chatham University was established nearby Today Chatham University owns several of these large houses In 1869 the clubhouse of the Pittsburgh Golf Club was built at the new Schenley Park Golf Course The present building by Alden and Harlow was constructed in 1900 In 1876 the Homewood Cemetery was established on 176 acres 0 71 km2 of land in Squirrel Hill 11 Over the course of the 19th century the focus of Squirrel Hill shifted from its riverfront at the Monongahela River to the area closest to Oakland and Shadyside Ebdy s orchard was located near Shady Avenue and Murdoch s farm known for its flowers fruit trees and vegetable trees was located on the hill above Oakland By the late 1800s the building of trolley lines caused a migration of wealthy executives outwards toward country estates and workers inward toward trolley lines Farms were sold and divided for new housing developments 22 nbsp Inside the Squirrel Hill Tunnel which runs underneath the southern half of Squirrel Hill The growth of Squirrel Hill accelerated when an electric trolley was installed in 1893 11 The trolley line ran via Forbes Avenue and Murray Avenue terminating in Homestead The trolley line facilitated the building of hundreds of houses for the middle management of local factories especially on Shady and Denniston Avenues near Aylesboro Despite its trolley line Murray Avenue remained a dirt road until 1920 Murray Avenue carried three Pittsburgh Railways trolley lines 69 Squirrel Hill 60 East Liberty Homestead and 68 Homestead Duquesne Kennywood McKeesport until 1958 when the trolleys were replaced by buses Bus routes 61A 61B 61C 61D 64 67 and 69 pass through the area today Squirrel Hill grew even more with the opening of the Boulevard of the Allies in 1927 providing a direct link to downtown Pittsburgh By the 1930s most of the available land in Squirrel Hill had been filled In 1953 the Parkway and Squirrel Hill Tunnel were opened They gave the area easier and quicker access from surrounding neighborhoods 11 Cultural life editSquirrel Hill s business area along Forbes and Murray avenues is referred to as upstreet a contraction of up the street by locals In addition to the many retail businesses in the neighborhood there are a number of longtime non profit organizations including a branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh the Jewish Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh 23 the Jewish Family amp Children s Service of Pittsburgh 23 24 the Children s Institute of Pittsburgh 23 and the Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition 25 Many annual events are hosted in Squirrel Hill by various community organizations Parks edit nbsp Chatham University Arboretum located in the north of Squirrel Hill Squirrel Hill contains several nature related points of interest They include the Chatham University Arboretum originally belonging to Andrew Mellon Schenley Park and Frick Park In 1889 Schenley Park was established on land donated from Mary Schenley whose grandfather had been the owner of considerable amounts of land in the area The original size of the park was 120 acres 0 49 km2 though it eventually expanded to 456 acres 1 85 km2 over the years 11 When Henry Clay Frick died in 1919 he bequeathed 150 acres 0 61 km2 of undeveloped land to the City of Pittsburgh for use as a public park He provided a 2 million trust fund to assist with the maintenance of the park Frick Park on the eastern border of the Squirrel Hill neighborhood opened in 1927 Between 1919 and 1942 money from the trust fund was used to enlarge the park increasing its size to almost 600 acres 2 4 km2 In February 2004 Frick Park grew with the addition of the Nine Mile Run stream restoration area which flows to the Monongahela River The United States Army Corps of Engineers managed the restoration funded with 5 million in federal money and 2 7 million raised by the city 26 The restoration was completed in 2006 Jewish community editSee also History of the Jews in Pittsburgh The origins of Squirrel Hill s Jewish community dates from the 1920s when Eastern European Jews began to move to the neighborhood in large numbers from Oakland and the Hill District Many of them took up residence in rows of brick houses on the cross streets of Murray Avenue south of Forbes such as Darlington Road Bartlett Street and Beacon Street The neighborhood became the center of Jewish culture in the city with kosher butcher shops delicatessens Jewish restaurants bookstores and designer boutiques Several hundred Russian Jewish immigrants moved to the neighborhood in the 1990s 6 A 2017 study of the Greater Pittsburgh Jewish community conducted by researchers at Brandeis University and commissioned by the local Jewish Federation found that 26 of Pittsburgh area Jews live in Squirrel Hill 20 live in the South Hills 9 live in the North Hills 31 live in other areas of Pittsburgh and 14 live in other areas of the region Although Squirrel Hill remains the traditional center of Jewish life in the region the study found a shift to more suburban areas The study also found an increase in the population of Jews who identify as Orthodox or secular and a decrease in the number of Jews who identify as Conservative and Reform denominations 27 This feature of Squirrel Hill and surrounding Jewish communities sustained locations of Jewish life across time and denominations makes the area unusual compared to Jewish life in other cities Elsewhere Jews tended to migrate in waves to suburban areas during the twentieth century and more geographic separation exists between denominations compared to Pittsburgh 28 All of Squirrel Hill as well as much of the neighboring neighborhoods of Greenfield and Regent Square is within an eruv a symbolic enclosure that allows Orthodox Jews to push or carry items on Shabbat the Jewish sabbath in which no work is traditionally done 29 The irregular boundaries of the eruv are such that as one writer noted an Orthodox Jew could carry something within the eruv s boundaries all the way from the north end of the Hot Metal Bridge to the intersection of Wilkins and South Dallas in Point Breeze 30 Squirrel Hill contains three Jewish day schools two are affiliated with the Chabad and Modern Orthodox movements respectively 31 32 while Community Day School is a co ed independent Jewish day school in the neighborhood that attracts families across the wide spectrum of Jewish belief and practice 33 Antisemitic attacks edit Main article Murder of Neal Rosenblum On April 17 1986 Neal Rosenblum a 24 year old rabbinical student visiting from Toronto was shot and killed near his in laws house in Squirrel Hill 34 A suspect 45 year old Steven M Tielsch was arrested in 2000 34 after bragging to a fellow prison inmate that he had killed a Jew 35 Tielsch s first three trials ended in a deadlocked jury he was convicted of third degree murder in a fourth trial in 2002 36 The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upheld the decision in 2007 36 Main article Pittsburgh synagogue shooting On October 27 2018 Robert Bowers entered the Tree of Life Or L Simcha synagogue during Shabbat morning services and opened fire killing 11 people and injuring six including four police officers 37 Education edit nbsp Carnegie Mellon University Public schools edit The Free Public School Act of 1834 ordered school districts not only to establish free schools but also to establish them in townships outside city limits 38 This affected Squirrel Hill since it was part of Peebles Township at the time John Turner who never learned to read or write but became a wealthy landowner left land and money to the community to build a school when he died in 1844 at the age of 83 It was called Squirrel Hill School and was located on Bigelow Street at Hazelwood Avenue in the Greenfield neighborhood Its successor closed in 1915 and was replaced by Roosevelt School named for then president Theodore Roosevelt It closed in 1957 It was replaced by John Minadeo Elementary School named for a ninth grade school crossing guard who gave his life to save a group of young students in the path of a runaway car near Gladstone School 39 40 nbsp The Wightman School closed in 1980 and the building is now used as a community center After Peebles Township was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1868 Squirrel Hill became the Colfax School District named for Schuyler Colfax who was Vice President of the United States under President Ulysses S Grant The district had five numbered schools Colfax No 1 was located at Phillips Avenue and Beechwood Boulevard Today it is Pittsburgh Colfax K 8 Colfax No 2 was on Beechwood Boulevard near the intersection of Saline Street and Hazelwood Avenue near Browns Hill Road It closed in 1907 but was reopened in 1916 as the Roosevelt School Annex when Roosevelt became overcrowded The annex closed in 1939 Colfax No 3 on Forward Avenue became Forward Avenue School and was named after Walter Forward who was appointed U S Secretary of the Treasury by President John Tyler The school was torn down in 1923 but its retaining wall still exists under the Parkway East bridge over Saline Street Colfax No 4 at Whipple and Commercial streets became Swisshelm School and was named for Jane Swisshelm a writer and abolitionist Colfax No 5 at Solway and Wightman streets became Wightman School and was named for Thomas Wightman owner of the Thomas Wightman Glass Company Wightman operated as a school from 1897 to 1980 and since then has been used as a community center building and the home of Carriage House Children s Center The building underwent extensive restoration and remodeling to make it one of only two older buildings in Western Pennsylvania to have LEED Gold certification 40 nbsp Taylor Allderdice High School Two other public elementary schools existed in Squirrel Hill Brown School was built near the Monongahela River in 1888 on land donated by the Brown family It closed in 1932 H B Davis School named for a principal of the Frick Training School for Teachers was located on Phillips Avenue It opened in 1931 and closed in 1980 41 Squirrel Hill s Taylor Allderdice High School opened in 1927 42 It was named for the president of the National Tube Company who was also a member of the Pittsburgh Public Schools Board of Education which was created in 1911 and given jurisdiction over all the public schools in the city including those in Squirrel Hill 40 Private schools edit Some private schools located in Squirrel Hill are St Edmund s Academy a private nonsectarian formerly Episcopal elementary school Community Day School a co ed independent Jewish day school for students ages 3 to grade 8 Hillel Academy of Pittsburgh and Yeshiva Schools of Pittsburgh The Day School at the Children s Institute of Pittsburgh serves children with a wide range of special needs Higher education edit Carnegie Mellon University CMU and Chatham University are located in Squirrel Hill although many of CMU s buildings are in Oakland CMU borders Pittsburgh s Oakland neighborhood while Chatham borders Shadyside Local government editThe neighborhood is represented on Pittsburgh City Council by Corey O Connor District 5 Squirrel Hill South and Erika Strassburger District 8 Squirrel Hill North Notable people editMarty Allen stand up comedian and actor 43 Mel Bochner born 1940 artist 44 Janice Burgess 1952 2024 former Nickelodeon executive and creator of The Backyardigans Richard Caliguiri former mayor of Pittsburgh 45 Willa Cather author 46 Murray Chass sports journalist member of baseball Hall of Fame Danny Chew former professional road racing and ultramarathon cyclist 47 48 Myron Cope sports journalist radio personality and sportscaster 49 Iris Rainer Dart author and playwright 50 Jerry Fielding composer 51 Bob Filner born 1942 politician congressman and San Diego mayor Howard Fineman journalist 52 Bernard Fisher physician scientist and pioneer in the biology and treatment of breast cancer 53 Rich Fitzgerald politician Gary Graff music journalist and author 54 Joseph Koerner art historian and filmmaker Maxine Lapiduss television producer television writer and comedian 55 Sally Lapiduss television producer and writer 56 Steve Lieber comic book illustrator 57 Kathleen Marshall choreographer director and creative consultant 58 Rob Marshall theater director film director and choreographer 58 Sophie Masloff former mayor of Pittsburgh 59 Lucian Wintrich artist writer media personality and former White House Correspondent for The Gateway Pundit Mac Miller rapper and record producer 60 David Scott Milton author playwright screenwriter and actor Bob O Connor former mayor of Pittsburgh Fred Rogers host Mister Rogers Neighborhood 61 Robert Schmertz artist Herbert A Simon political scientist economist sociologist psychologist and professor 62 Mike Tomlin Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Bari Weiss born 1984 former New York Times opinion section staff editor 63 Evan Wolfson attorney and gay rights advocate 64 See also editList of Pittsburgh neighborhoods History of Pittsburgh Jewish history in Pittsburgh Squirrel Hill Philadelphia Pennsylvania a smaller neighborhood with the same name Squirrel Hill Tunnel carries Interstate 376 under the neighborhood Summerset at Frick Park S W Randall Toyes amp GiftsNotes and references edit a b c Census Pittsburgh PDF Pittsburgh Department of City Planning January 2006 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2007 Retrieved July 19 2007 a b c Census Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Department of City Planning Archived from the original on November 5 2012 Retrieved October 28 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Murray Hill Avenue Designated Historic District PDF City of Pittsburgh Historic Review Commission Archived from the original PDF on January 8 2010 Retrieved January 6 2010 Historic Landmark Plaques 1968 2009 PDF Pittsburgh PA Pittsburgh History amp Landmarks Foundation 2010 Retrieved August 5 2011 Pghsnap Archived November 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b Ansberry Clare July 2 2010 Diverse Views on Israel Emerge in Jewish Enclave Wall Street Journal The 2002 Pittsburgh Jewish Community Study Archived July 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Fight to Recognize Pittsburgh s Lost Chinatown October 17 2019 Chinese Lunar New Year Parade kicks off Year of the Pig in Squirrel Hill Increase In Asian Population Is Changing Region Culturally Economically November 2017 a b c d e f Ehrmann Michael Winter 2009 The Development of Squirrel Hill PDF Squirrel Hill Magazine Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition Archived from the original PDF on December 25 2011 Bloom Albert W January 14 1953 Pittsburgh today made up of many villages Pittsburgh Post Gazette p 23 Retrieved December 2 2015 Brief History of the Turner Cemetery Retrieved October 29 2012 Joseph F McFarland William B Murdoch Washington County PA Biographies www onlinebiographies info Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2014 Retrieved September 15 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link murdochgardens com www murdochgardens com Lillian Thomas Pittsburgh plays the name game old post gazette com Relocating to Pittsburgh from San Francisco Advice Needed York Washington homes job outlook Pennsylvania PA Page 5 City Data Forum www city data com Squirrel Hill Historical Society Squirrel Hill Historical Society Guns for the Union Archived September 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Jim Wudarczyk Lawrenceville Historical Society website retrieved November 8 2012 Wilson Helen Winter 2011 Squirrel Hillʼs Part in the Civil War PDF Squirrel Hill Magazine Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition Archived from the original PDF on March 24 2012 Wilson Helen Fall 2011 Connections to the Past Farming Right Here in Squirrel Hill PDF Squirrel Hill Magazine Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition Archived from the original PDF on March 18 2014 a b c Serving One and All A History of Social Services in Squirrel Hill Archived March 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine By Emily Leon Winter 2011 Vancheri Barbara May 12 1988 Low profile Jewish agency marks 50 years of family service Pittsburgh Post Gazette Luce Angell Kate August 7 2008 Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition to spread word about efforts through magazine Pittsburgh Post Gazette Project to enliven Nine Mile Run add 550 acres 2 2 km2 to Frick Park By Joe Smydo Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 29 2004 Report Pittsburgh Jewish community growing spreading out Pittsburgh Post Gazette February 20 2018 Oppenheimer Mark 2021 Squirrel Hill the Tree of Life Synagogue shooting and the soul of a neighborhood New York p 150 ISBN 9780525657194 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Boundless commitment keeps Pittsburgh s eruv boundary in check Pittsburg Jewish Chronicle April 8 2015 Potter Chris September 14 2006 Is there a wall around Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh City Paper Vol 16 no 38 Retrieved September 14 2021 Yeshiva Schools and Lubavitch Center of Pittsburgh www yeshivaschool com Retrieved November 18 2015 Hillel Academy of Pittsburgh Hillel Academy of Pittsburgh Retrieved November 18 2015 Home Page Community Day School comday org Retrieved November 18 2015 a b Argento Mike October 28 2018 A people raised in violence had found peace in Squirrel Hill before synagogue mass shooting York Daily Record Retrieved October 28 2018 Fattal Isabel October 28 2018 A Brief History of Anti Semitic Violence in America The Atlantic Retrieved October 28 2018 a b Pittsburgh PA Conviction Upheld in Murder of Yeshiva Student Vosizneias August 26 2007 Retrieved October 28 2018 Hate crime charges filed in Pittsburgh synagogue shooting that left 11 dead CNN October 27 2018 Retrieved October 27 2018 The Fight For Free Schools In Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Historical amp Museum Commission Retrieved January 14 2013 Bukk Bob March 30 2012 The Next Page A Pittsburgh hero John Minadeo Pittsburgh Post Gazette a b c Wilson Helen Spring 2011 The Education of Squirrel Hill PDF Squirrel Hill Magazine Squirrel Hill Urban Coalition dead link City schools cut 51 jobs from payroll Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 28 1981 School Information Quick Facts Pittsburgh Public Schools Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved January 14 2013 Hecht Steve August 27 2009 Comedian Marty Allen part of Allderdice s first hall class Pittsburgh Post Gazette Archived copy Archived from the original on February 2 2014 Retrieved January 28 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Uhl Sherley November 5 1985 Voter turnout light in quiet election The Pittsburgh Press Iskovitz Mark Squirrel Hill History A Pittsburgh Neighborhood Squirrel Hill Historical Society Retrieved January 13 2013 Here They All Come The Pittsburgh Press June 1 1979 Page 4 Retrieved February 19 2021 Morning Briefing Cycling Pittsburgh Post Gazette July 31 1999 Page 34 Retrieved February 19 2021 Dubner Stephen J 2009 Confessions of a Hero Worshiper HarperCollins p 140 ISBN 978 0061132988 Hoover Bob May 20 1999 Author s spin tales of life s lessons Pittsburgh Post Gazette Cohen Harold V April 1 1963 At Random Way Down East The Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved October 24 2017 Fineman Howard January 27 2005 Lessons in unity from Pittsburgh MSNBC Retrieved January 14 2013 Vondas Jerry March 15 2008 Dedicated pathologist made mark in his field Pittsburgh Tribune Review Mervis Scott October 11 2012 Gary Graff Rock n roll observer Pittsburgh Post Gazette Owen Rob July 20 2005 Funny business The Toledo Blade Owen Rob March 19 2000 Lapiduss sisters move on to new sitcom Web venture Pittsburgh Post Gazette Archived from the original on January 6 2016 Retrieved January 14 2013 Hayes John April 27 2001 Squirrel Hill native works the mainstream and the underground Pittsburgh Post Gazette Archived from the original on January 6 2016 Retrieved January 14 2013 a b Rawson Christopher August 22 2007 Two Marshalls win Governor s Awards for the Arts Pittsburgh Post Gazette Langley Karen October 3 2012 Pa voters won t need to show photo ID The Toledo Blade https www jewishvirtuallibrary org mac miller Mac Miller Jewish Virtual Library Owen Rob February 28 2003 Fred Rogers dies at 74 Pittsburgh Post Gazette Archived from the original on January 6 2022 Retrieved January 14 2013 Crowther Heyck Hunter 2005 Herbert A Simon The Bounds of Reason in Modern America The Johns Hopkins University Press pp 141 42 ISBN 0801880254 Tabachnick Toby October 27 2017 Times opinion editor Burgh native Bari Weiss talks news Jews and views Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle Vol 60 no 43 p 1 16 Retrieved April 19 2018 Feldman Jacqueline March 30 2012 Gay marriage advocate sees Pa lagging behind Pittsburgh Post Gazette Further reading edit Toker Franklin 1994 1986 Pittsburgh An Urban Portrait Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 5434 6 Squirrel Hill Historical Society 2005 Images of America Squirrel Hill Arcadia Publishing ISBN 0 7385 3717 9 History of the JCC Pittsburgh The Corner Where You Are A Sesquicentennial History of Sixth Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh by David W MillerExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh City of Pittsburgh s Squirrel Hill page Interactive Pittsburgh neighborhoods map Visitor s guide to Squirrel Hill Historic Pittsburgh map collections 1872 Atlas of the Cities of Pittsburgh Allegheny and Adjoining Boroughs Plate 12 1872 Atlas of the Cities of Pittsburgh Allegheny and the Adjoining Boroughs Plate 10 1876 Atlas of the Cities of Pittsburgh Allegheny and the Adjoining Boroughs Plate 76 1904 Volume 1 East End of Pittsburgh South Wards 13 14 22 and 23 1923 Volume 2 East End South Wards 7 and 14 15 1939 Volume 2 East End South Wards 7 14 and 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Squirrel Hill amp oldid 1212066293, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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