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A 2017 study of the Greater Pittsburgh Jewish community, conducted by researchers at Brandeis University and commissioned by the local Jewish Federation, found that 26% of Pittsburgh-area Jews live in Squirrel Hill, 20% live in the South Hills, 9% live in the North Hills, 31% live in other areas of Pittsburgh, and 14% live in other areas of the ...
Squirrel Hill South: 1957 [53] n/a Now Minadeo PreK–5 Northview Heights Elementary School Northview Heights: 1962 [106] 2012 [23] David B. Oliver Citywide Academy (Oliver High School) Marshall-Shadeland: 1925 n/a Oliver High closed in 2012 [23] and reopened as Oliver Citywide Academy special-ed school Perry High School: Perry North: 1923 n/a
Academy of Music (also known as Harry Williams' Academy of Music) Allegheny Theater (also known as Hazlett Theater within the Carnegie Free Library of Allegheny) Alumni Theatre Company (current) Alvin Theatre (Pittsburgh) [1] Allegheny Repertory Theatre; American Ibsen Theatre; Apple Hill Playhouse; August Wilson Center for African American ...
St. Edmund's was founded as an all-boys diocesan school in 1947 by a group of parents associated with the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer in Squirrel Hill. [3] The school came to occupy its current location in 1954 when Pauline Mudge, widow of prominent Pittsburgh industrialist Edmund W. Mudge, [4] donated a plot of land adjacent to the parish house of the Church of the Redeemer.
Squirrel Hill 2014 Abraam Steinberg house 1951 Peter Berndtson and Cornelia Brierly: 5139 Penton Road Squirrel Hill 1989, 1995 Sterrett Classical Academy (formerly Sterrett School) (City of Pittsburgh Public Schools) 1898 Edward J. Carlisle 339 Lang Avenue Point Breeze 2001
The school was established in 1927 and is part of the Pittsburgh Public Schools district. It was named for industrialist and Squirrel Hill resident Taylor Allderdice, who was a member of the city's first school board and president of National Tube Company, a subsidiary of U.S. Steel. [10]
Homewood was founded in 1832 by Judge William Wilkins. [4] The earliest black residents moved into the sparsely-populated area in the aftermath of the Civil War. [5] Homewood was annexed by the city of Pittsburgh on December 1, 1884 [4] and held in those years mainly estates for the wealthy, being the Pittsburgh residence of industrialists Andrew Carnegie and Thomas M. Carnegie until the late ...
Schmertz was born on March 4, 1898, [1] in Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. [2] After he completed studies at Peabody High School, where he met his future wife, Mildred, [2] Schmertz attended the Carnegie Institute of Technology (today, Carnegie Mellon University). In May 1917 Schmertz, dressed in "light flannel trousers, a girl's middy ...