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South Side Scene
1949/1955
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Title
South Side Scene
Identifier
MSP285.B013.F29.I04
Source Identifier
MSP285.B013.F29.I04
Description
Pittsburgh’s South Side neighborhood was originally known as Birmingham. The land was given to John Ormsby by the King of England for service in the French and Indian War. The town was created by Ormsby’s son-in-law who named it Birmingham. The Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation’s (J&L) iron furnace and mill were located on the South Side of the Monongahela River, in the East Birmingham neighborhood of Pittsburgh. By the start of World War II, J&L was the fourth largest steel producer in the world, producing over 4.8 million tons of steel a year and employing 45,000 workers. The depressed steel market of the 1970s led to a rapid decline in steel production in the Pittsburgh area. The corporation soon began demolishing older factories with no intention of rebuilding. By 1989 most of the South Side Works and the Eliza Furnaces across the Monongahela River were leveled. In the 1990s the few remaining buildings serve as a distant memory of the thriving community these factories surrounded.
Genre
photographs
Subject
South Side (Pittsburgh, Pa.)
Costume Way (Pittsburgh, Pa.)
Source
Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs, 1892-1981, MSP 285, Library and Archives Division, Senator John Heinz History Center
Contributor
Detre Library & Archives, Heinz History Center
Collection
Allegheny Conference on Community Development Photographs
Rights Information
Copyright Not Evaluated. The copyright and related rights status of this Item has not been evaluated. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/