|
|
|
Forks
of the Ohio |
|
The challenges of travel over the Allegheny Mountains truly isolated Pittsburgh from the East Coast, as shipping goods by Conestoga wagon between Philadelphia and isolated Pittsburgh was a dangerous and time-consuming endeavor. New settlers moving west also made the arduous trip across the mountains and would stop in Pittsburgh, anxious to take advantage of river travel for the reminder of their journey.
During this era Pittsburghers soon realized the benefits of producing their own goods to avoid the high cost of shipping from the east. And with the rivers to aid them, they could easily ship and sell their goods further downriver where people were also eager to avoid the higher costs of eastern goods. The mountains formed a sort of protective tariff allowing manufacturing in Pittsburgh to thrive without much competition. In 1792, Pittsburgh's 33 craftsmen included coopers, tanners, weavers, tinsmiths, blacksmiths, shoemakers, cabinetmakers, ropemakers, brewers, saddlers, and clockmakers. In 1795 James O'Hara and Isaac Craig founded a factory to manufacture glass--the most difficult-to-transport material of all. Other glass factories soon followed, making glassmaking Pittsburgh's second major industry.
Travel in both directions on the river became a much easier and practical prospect in 1811, when Robert Fulton and Nicholas Roosevelt (whose family later produced the American presidents) built the first steamboat on western waters right in Pittsburgh. The city became a jumping-off point for people and goods heading west after travelling over the mountains. This journey became easier in 1830 with the building of the incredible Pennsylvania Mainline Canal, which ran along the north side of the Allegheny River through the city of Allegheny (now the North Side) and crossed the river to its end (terminus) in Pittsburgh.
|
|
|
|
1830 view of Pittsburgh shows how steamboats had come to dominate river traffic -- the Monongahela wharf is lined with steamers. Note the covered wooden bridge over the Allegheny. Just out of view on the right is the first Smithfield Bridge, the city's first also built out of in 1820. |
|
By the 1820s massive lumber rafts floated into Pittsburgh from northern forests, and as early as the 1830s, steamboats pushed barges full of coal along the Monongahela River. Coal mined from the region's hills fueled stoves for heating and cooking and stoked steamboats, and later, trains. Surprisingly, ironmaking was not big in Pittsburgh during this period. The iron furnaces of the time used charcoal rather than coal, so they were located in the countryside where wood for fuel was plentiful. Pig iron was shipped to Pittsburgh blacksmiths for finishing. To supply the iron needs of the War of 1812 and the budding steam engine manufacturing, larger ironworking forges, foundries, rolling mills, and machine shops sprung up on the flat lands along the rivers.
With growing factories, and improved methods of navigating the river, Pittsburgh's population grew allowing it to incorporate as a city in 1816. Many of the social structures that support "civilization" grew right along with it. Churches and schools sprung up to serve communities of people who lived within walking distance of the manufactories situated at Pittsburgh's Point. Some of the existing structures from this era are the Burkes's Building and the Trinity Cathedral graveyard Downtown, and the Beulah Church in Churchill.
|
|
|
|
1840 drawing of Pittsburgh from Grant's Hill (now Grant Street). The Allegheny River is to the right, crossed by the Pennsylvania Mainline Canalin the lower third of the drawing and by a covered wooden bridge further down river. The city of Allegheny is across the river. |
On the south shore, the city of Birmingham (now the South Side), also established itself as a marketplace for area farmers then as a center for industry. The land was originally given to John Ormsby by the King of England, his reward for service in the French and Indian War. Ormsby's son-in-law laid out the town, and called it "Birmingham" after his own hometown in England. Streets were named after members of his family. This may surprise modern-day residents of the South Side, who still live on streets with names such as Sarah, Jane, and Muriel!
Birmingham was the location of many of the regions' successful glass factories, the first dating all the way back to the 1790's. During this era, glass production was performed by skilled craftsmen (many new German immigrants) in small factories. But later in the century 70 glass shops would be producing in Birmingham, making over half of the nation's glass.
|
|
|
Drawing of an early glass works in Pittsburgh. Birmingham is across the Monongahela River in the background (note the steamboats). |
Early in this period, however, it was by no means inevitable that Pittsburgh would become (or remain) the Gateway to the West. Brownsville and Wheeling were fierce rivals with the distinct advantage of being on the National Road (finished in 1820), which by-passed Pittsburgh. The issue was only settled at the close of the period when the Pennsylvania Railroad reached Pittsburgh in 1852.
|
|
Western PA History | Bridges & Buildings | Rivers & Valleys | Creating Community | The Arts | Having Fun
Pittsburgh History Series Teacher's Guide