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Earlier structural methodsBut Downtown is not all skyscrapers! Looking between the tall 20th century buildings you'll catch a glimpse of earlier times when buildings were a little more human in scale and weight-bearing walls served as both skeleton and skin. These small gems tucked among the skyscrapers document the past as surely as precious archives or smaller artifacts. Most residents know that the Bouquet's Redoubt, commonly called the Fort Pitt Block House, standing in Point State Park, is Pittsburgh's oldest structure. Because it is constructed of brick masonry, it outlasted by centuries the last remnants of the log village that played a major role in a titanic 18th century struggle between the French, British, and Native Americans. Those armies fought for control of the middle of the continent, and the past names of the fort reveal the struggle: In 1754 it was Fort Prince George, in 1755 Fort Duquesne, in 1758 Fort Pitt. Today it stands as a museum chronicling the role of "Pittsborough" in the years leading up to the Revolutionary War. (See also, Western PA History.)
While most of us know the Blockhouse is the city's oldest structure, how many people can name the city's second oldest structure? It's the Burke Building, another small structure, that sits on Fourth Avenue right next door to the impressive glass castle known as PPG Plaza. When it began life in 1830 as a bank, its sandstone post-and-lintel construction and Greek Revival style must have stood out among the more common wood and brick buildings of the day. Its stone walls were among the few that survived the fire of 1845 and it has miraculously survived the wrecking ball of several Downtown building booms.
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Architectural
historians have called H. H. Richardson's Allegheny County
Courthouse masterpiece "a symphony of arches.".
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Western PA History | Bridges & Buildings | Rivers & Valleys | Creating Community | The Arts | Having Fun
Pittsburgh History Series Teacher's Guide