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East Liberty is a neighborhood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania's East End. It is bordered by Highland Park , Morningside , Stanton Heights , Garfield , Friendship , Shadyside and Larimer , and falls largely within Pittsburgh City Council District 9, with a few areas in District 8.
East Liberty, along with surrounding areas, was annexed to Pittsburgh formally in 1868, and in the post-Civil War era of the late nineteenth century these neighborhoods began to develop substantially, with East Liberty becoming a commercial and retail hub serving the growing residential sections of Shadyside, Homewood, Wilkinsburg, and Highland ...
Liberty Township was a short-lived township of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, in the east of what is now Pittsburgh. It was formed on December 3, 1864, from a portion of Peebles Township . Its territory lay south of Penn Avenue and included the present-day neighborhoods of Shadyside , Point Breeze and Friendship , and parts of East Liberty ...
Motor Square Garden, also known as East Liberty Market, is a building in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States, that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Located at 5900 Baum Boulevard in the East Liberty neighborhood, it today serves as the headquarters of the Pittsburgh branch of the American Automobile Association , which ...
Saints Peter and Paul Church is a historic former Roman Catholic church in the East Liberty neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is often referred to colloquially as the "Dogma Church" because of its appearance in the climactic scene of the 1999 Kevin Smith film Dogma.
Larimer is a neighborhood in the East End of the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in the United States.The neighborhood takes its name from William Larimer, who grew up in nearby Westmoreland County and, after making a fortune in the railroad industry, built a manor house overlooking East Liberty along a path that came to be called "Larimer Lane" and later Larimer Avenue.
East Liberty is a station on the East Busway, [2] located in East Liberty and near the Shadyside and Larimer neighborhoods of Pittsburgh. In 2015, the station was rebuilt, as part of the East Liberty Transit Center.
East Liberty Presbyterian Church: 1935 Ralph Adams Cram: Highland and Penn Avenues East Liberty 1969 East Pittsburgh U.S. Post Office 1916 James A. Wetmore: 701 Linden Avenue East Pittsburgh 2014 Ebenezer Baptist Church 1931 2001 Wylie Avenue Hill, the 1979 Demolished Edgar Thomson Works, United States Steel: 1875 (since) North Braddock