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Lower Hill District before Demolition
1956-10
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Title
Lower Hill District before Demolition
Creator
John R. Shrader
Identifier
MSP285.B033.F05.I09
Source Identifier
MSP285.B033.F05.I09
Description
Logan Street at Hazel Street, looking southeast on Logan Street toward Colwell Street. Early in the nineteenth century Pittsburgh's Hill District neighborhood contained country estates, working farms, coal mines, and a village of black freedmen. By 1929 the Hill District was populated by a diverse number of ethnic groups. The Hill District was divided into areas that reflected the ethnic makeup of that neighborhood. Some of these areas were called Little Italy, Polish Hill, Athens, Little Syria, Jewish “Ghetto,” and the Black Belt. During the twentieth century the older ethnic and Jewish population moved away and the Hill District became known as the Harlem of Pittsburgh, a place where the best jazz could be heard. Urban renewal in the 1950s removed virtually all of the Lower Hill.
Genre
photographs
Subject
Lower Hill (Pittsburgh, Pa.)
Logan Street (Pittsburgh, Pa.)
Logan Drug Store (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/