History festival to mark East Liberty's past

2012-03-29 06:12:07
  • In this photo taken in the 1890s, Civil War veterans participate in a reunion in front of a building on Penn Circle South that is still standing in East Liberty. The past of the East End/East Liberty area will be celebrated during Saturday's first-ever East Liberty History Festival.
    In this photo taken in the 1890s, Civil War veterans participate in a reunion in front of a building on Penn Circle South that is still standing in East Liberty. The past of the East End/East Liberty area will be celebrated during Saturday's first-ever East Liberty History Festival.

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Public knowledge of East Liberty's past is stuck on urban renewal, high-rises and crime. But that era was a blip.

East End history buffs hope to put the past in perspective Saturday at the East Liberty History Festival, a first-time event in a neighborhood of firsts.

What most people don't know about East End history -- with East Liberty at its hub -- would overflow the parking lot at Eastminster Presbyterian Church, but the day-long event of the East End/East Liberty Historical Society has been designed to fit there, for free, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.

From Indians and traders to the first immigrant settlers, the festival will highlight the progression of development and industrial change that brought unparalleled prosperity to the area. In a recent Arcadia "Images of America" publication, the title "Pittsburgh's East Liberty Valley" was chosen to encompass the breadth of East Liberty's influence.

Historical society members who put the book together said many images that would today be in Shadyside or other adjacent neighborhoods were then described as East Liberty.

"On the old postcards, East Liberty went all the way up to Fifth Avenue," said Marilyn Evert, a member of the historical society and director of development at Homewood Cemetery. When East Liberty began its slump in the 1970s, she said, "people began to disassociate themselves."

Al Mann, a retired chemical engineer from Highland Park, has been at the helm of planning the festival for the past year as the society's president. In a bag behind the driver's seat of his car, he has been carrying around items for display, among them a large aluminum mold of an Easter bunny.

The mold was used at Bolan's Candies in East Liberty, the first of the family's several stores, open on Penn Avenue from 1918 until several years ago.

"We have a lot of firsts," said Mr. Mann. The first commercial oil refinery in the nation was in Highland Park, and the society has the papers to prove it. The first radio broadcast of a church service was from Calvary Episcopal in Shadyside in 1921. The nation's first drive-up gas station was at Baum Boulevard and St. Clair Street. Pittsburgh's first traffic light was at Highland and Penn avenues.

Diana Nelson Jones: djones@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1626. Read her blog City Walkabout at blogs.sites.post-gazette.com.
First Published October 1, 2010 12:00 am

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