I
But while these stupendous industries
have given Pittsburgh her wealth, population, supremacy,
and power, commercial materialism is not the ultima
thule of her people.
Travelers who come to Pittsburgh,
forgetting the smoke which often dims the blue splendor
of its skies, are struck with the picturesque situation
of the town, for they find rolling plateaus, wide rivers,
and narrow valleys dropping down from high hills or
precipitous bluffs throughout the whole district over
which the city extends. Yet the surpassing beauty
of nature is not more impressive to the thinking stranger
than the work of man who has created and dominates
a vast industrial system. The manufactories extend
for miles along the banks of all three rivers.
Red fires rise heavenward from gigantic forges where
iron is being fused into wealth. The business
section of the city is wedged in by the rivers, its
streets are swarming with people, and there is a myriad
of retail houses, wholesale houses, banks, tall office
buildings, hotels, theaters, and railway terminals;
but right where these stop the residence section begins
like another city of happy homes an immense
garden of verdant trees and flowering lawns divided
off by beautiful avenues, where some houses rise which
in Europe would be called castles and palaces, with
scarce a fence between to mark the land lines, giving
an aspect almost of a park rather than of a city.
There are many miles of asphalt streets set off with
grass plots. On the rolling hills above the Monongahela
River is Schenley Park (about four hundred and forty
acres) with beautiful drives, winding bridle paths,
and shady walks through narrow valleys and over small
streams. Above the Allegheny River is Highland
Park (about two hundred and ninety acres), containing
a placid lake and commanding fine views from the summits
of its great hills. It also contains a very interesting
zooelogical garden. Close to Schenley Park are
Homewood and Calvary Cemeteries and near Highland
Park is Allegheny Cemetery, where the dead sleep amidst
drooping willows and shading elms. Connecting
the two parks and leading to them from the downtown
section is a system of wide boulevards about twenty
miles in length. On the North Side (once Allegheny)
is Riverview Park (two hundred and seventeen acres),
in which the Allegheny Observatory is situated.
A large number of handsome bridges span the rivers.
The Pittsburgh Country Club provides a broad expanse
of rolling acres for pastoral sports.
II
In Schenley Park is the Carnegie Institute,
with its new main building, dedicated in April (11,
12, and 13), 1907, with imposing ceremonies which
were attended by several hundred prominent men from
America and Europe. This building, which is about
six hundred feet long and four hundred feet wide,
contains a library, an art gallery, halls of architecture
and sculpture, a museum, and a hall of music; while
the Carnegie Technical Schools are operated in separate
buildings near by. It is built in the later Renaissance
style, being very simple and yet beautiful. Its
exterior is of Ohio sandstone, while its interior finish
is largely in marble, of which there are sixty-five
varieties, brought from every famous quarry in the
world. In its great entrance hall is a series
of mural decorations by John W. Alexander, a distinguished
son of Pittsburgh. The library, in which the
institution had its beginning in 1895, contains about
300,000 volumes, has seven important branches, and
one hundred and seventy-seven stations for the distribution
of books. Mr. Edwin H. Anderson inaugurated the
library at the time of its creation, and, after several
years of successful service, was followed by Mr. Anderson
H. Hopkins, and he by Mr. Harrison W. Craver, who is
now the efficient librarian. The Fine Arts department
contains many casts of notable works of architecture
and sculpture, sufficient to carry the visitor in
fancy through an almost unbroken development from the
earliest times in which man began to produce beautiful
structures to the present day. It is now the
aim of this department to develop its galleries on
three lines: first, to gather early American paintings
from the very beginning of art in this country; second,
to acquire such portraits of eminent men as will,
in the passage of years, make these halls to some
extent a national portrait gallery; and, third, to
obtain such pieces of contemporary art as will lead
to the formation of a thoroughly representative collection
of modern painting. The Art Gallery is already
rich in this latter purpose, and is renowned for its
annual competitive exhibits which are open to the
artists of all countries for prizes offered by the
Carnegie Institute. Mr. John W. Beatty, Director
of Fine Arts, has made the building up of this department
his ripest and best work. The Museum embraces
sections of paleontology, mineralogy, vertebrate and
invertebrate zooelogy, entomology, botany, comparative
anatomy, archaeology, numismatics, ceramics, textiles,
transportation, carvings in wood and ivory, historical
collections, the useful arts, and biological sciences.
Its work in the department of paleontology is particularly
noteworthy as it has extended the boundaries of knowledge
through its many explorations in the western fossil
fields. The success of the Museum is largely
due to the energy and erudition of Dr. W. J. Holland,
its amiable director. In the music-hall, a symphony
orchestra is maintained, and free recitals are given
on the great organ twice every week by a capable performer.
When the orchestra began its work thirteen years ago,
it is doubtful if there were very many persons in
Pittsburgh, other than musical students, who knew the
difference between a symphony, a suite, a concerto,
and a fugue. To-day there are thousands of people
in this city who can intelligently describe the shading
differences in the Ninth Symphony and give good reasons
for their preference as between the two movements
of the “Unfinished.” The first conductor
of the orchestra was Frederic Archer, for three years,
who was followed by Victor Herbert, for three years,
and then came Emil Paur, who is now in charge.
The Technical Schools embrace a School of Applied
Science, a School for Apprentices and Journeymen, a
School of Applied Design, and a School for Women,
and already possess a capable faculty of one hundred
and fifteen members, and a student body numbering
1,916. Dr. Arthur A. Hamerschlag is an enthusiastic
and capable director of this educational scheme.
The Institute is governed by a Board of Trustees,
of which William N. Frew is President, Robert Pitcairn,
Vice President, Samuel Harden Church, Secretary, and
James H. Reed, Treasurer. Charles C. Mellor is
chairman of the Museum committee, John Caldwell, of
the Fine Arts committee, George A. Macbeth, of the
Library committee, and William McConway, of the Technical
Schools committee.
The annual celebration of Founder’s
Day at the Carnegie Institute has become one of the
most notable platform occasions in America, made so
by the illustrious men who participate in the exercises.
Some of these distinguished orators are William McKinley
and Grover Cleveland, former Presidents of the United
States; John Morley and James Bryce, foremost among
British statesmen and authors; Joseph Jefferson, a
beloved actor; Richard Watson Gilder, editor and poet;
Wu Ting Fang, Chinese diplomat, and Whitelaw Reid,
editor and ambassador. At the great dedication
of the new building, in April, 1907, the celebration
of Founder’s Day surpassed all previous efforts,
being marked by the assembling of an illustrious group
of men, and the delivery of a series of addresses,
which made the festival altogether beyond precedent.
On that occasion there came to Pittsburgh, as the
guests of the Institute, from France, Dr. Léonce Benedite,
Director Musee du Luxembourg; Baron d’Estournelles
de Constant, Member of the French Senate and of the
Hague Court of Arbitration; Dr. Paul Doumer, late
Governor-General of Cochin China, and Dr. Camille
Enlart, Director of the Trocadero Museum; from Germany,
upon the personal suggestion of his Majesty, Emperor
William II, His Excellency Lieutenant-General Alfred
von Loewenfeld, Adjutant-General to his Majesty the
Emperor; Colonel Gustav Dickhuth, Lecturer on Military
Science to the Royal Household; Dr. Ernst von Ihne,
Hof-Architekt Sr. Maj. d. Kaisers;
Dr. Reinhold Koser, Principal Director of the
Prussian State Archives, and Prof. Dr. Fritz
Schaper, sculptor; from Great Britain, Mr. William
Archer, author and critic; Sir Robert S. Ball, Director
of Cambridge Observatory; Dr. C. F. Moberly Bell, manager
London “Times”; Sir Robert Cranston, late
Lord Provost of Edinburgh; Sir Edward Elgar, composer;
Mr. James Currie Macbeth, Provost of Dunfermline;
Dr. P. Chalmers Mitchell, Secretary Zooelogical Society
of London; Sir William Henry Preece, Consulting Engineer
to the G. P. O. and Colonies; Dr. John Rhys, Principal
of Jesus College, University of Oxford; Dr. Ernest
S. Roberts, Vice Chancellor of Cambridge University;
Mr. William Robertson, Member Dunfermline Trust; Dr.
John Ross, Chairman Dunfermline Trust, and Dr. William
T. Stead, editor “Review of Reviews”;
and from Holland, Jonkheer R. de Marées
van Swinderen, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary to the United States, and Dr. Joost
Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwartz ("Maarten
Maartens"), author.
Mr. Andrew Carnegie has founded this
splendid Institute, with its school system, at a cost
already approximating twenty million dollars, and he
must enjoy the satisfaction of knowing it to be the
rallying ground for the cultured and artistic life
of the community. The progress made each year
goes by leaps and bounds; so much so that we might
well employ the phrase used by Macaulay to describe
Lord Bacon’s philosophy: “The point
which was yesterday invisible is to-day its starting-point,
and to-morrow will be its goal.” The Institute
has truly a splendid mission.
III
The University of Pittsburgh was opened
about 1770 and incorporated by the Legislature in
1787 under the name Pittsburgh Academy. In 1819
the name was changed to the Western University of
Pennsylvania, but, holding to the narrower scope of
a college, it did not really become a university until
1892, when it formed the Department of Medicine by
taking over the Western Pennsylvania Medical College.
In 1895 the Departments of Law and Pharmacy were added
and women were for the first time admitted. In
1896 the Department of Dentistry was established.
In 1908 (July 11th) the name was changed to the University
of Pittsburgh. The several departments of the
University are at present (1908) located in different
parts of the city, but a new site of forty-three acres
has been acquired near Schenley Park on which it is
planned to bring them all together. These new
plans have been drawn under the direction of the chancellor,
Dr. Samuel Black McCormick, whose faith in the merit
of his cause is bound to remove whole mountains of
financial difficulties. The University embraces
a College and Engineering School, a School of Mines,
a Graduate Department, a Summer School, Evening Classes,
Saturday Classes, besides Departments of Astronomy,
Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, and Dentistry. It now
has a corps of one hundred and fifty-one instructors
and a body of 1,138 students.
IV
The author ventures to repeat in this
little book a suggestion which has been made by him
several times, looking to a working cooeperation or
even a closer bond of union between the Carnegie Institute
and the University of Pittsburgh. In an address
delivered at the Carnegie Institute on Founder’s
Day, 1908, the author made the following remarks on
this subject:
The temptation to go a little further
into the future first requires the acknowledgment
which St. Paul made when he wrote of marriage:
“I speak not by authority, but by sufferance.”
There will soon begin to rise on these adjacent
heights the first new buildings of the Western
University (now University of Pittsburgh), conceived
in the classic spirit of Greece and crowning that hill
like a modern Acropolis. With its charter
dating back one hundred and twenty-five years
the University is already venerable in this land.
Is it not feasible to hope that through the practical
benevolence of our people, some working basis
of union can be effected between that institution
and this? Here we have painting, and sculpture,
and architecture, and books, and a wonderfully rich
scientific collection, and the abiding spirit
of music. We have these fast-growing Technical
Schools. And yet the entire scheme seems
to be lacking something which marks its unfinished
state. The Technical Schools do not and
should not teach languages, literature, philosophy,
and the fine arts, nor the old learned professions,
but these must always rest in the University.
Should not one school thus supplement the other?
And then, the students on each side of this main
building would find available here those great
collections which, if properly demonstrated, would
give them a larger opportunity for systematic
culture than could be offered by any other community
in the world. For we should no longer permit
these great departments of the fine arts and of
the sciences to remain in a passive state, but
they should all be made the means of active instruction
from masterful professors. Music, its theory,
composition, and performance on every instrument
should be taught where demonstrations could be
made with the orchestra and the organ. Successful
painters and sculptors, the elected members of the
future faculty, should fix their studios near the Institute
and teach painting and sculpture as well as it
could be done in Paris or Munich. Architecture
should thrive by the hand of its trained votaries,
while science should continue to reveal the secrets
of her most attractive mysteries. Then,
as the ambitious youths of the ancient world
came to Athens to obtain the purest culture of that
age, so would our modern youths, who are already
in the Carnegie Technical Schools from twenty-six
States, continue to come to Pittsburgh to partake
of the most comprehensive scheme of education which
the world would obtain. Believing firmly in the
achieving power of hopeful thought, I pray you
think on this.
V
In the East End is the Pennsylvania
College for Women (Presbyterian; chartered in 1869),
which has one hundred and two students. On the
North Side (Allegheny) are the Allegheny Theological
Seminary (United Presbyterian; founded in 1825), which
has six instructors and sixty-one students; the Western
Theological Seminary (Presbyterian; opened in 1827),
with sixty-four students and twelve instructors, and
a library of 34,000 volumes; and the Reformed Presbyterian
Theological Seminary (founded in 1856). There
are five high schools and a normal academy and also
the following private academies: Pittsburgh Academy,
for both boys and girls; East Liberty Academy, for
boys; Lady of Mercy Academy, for girls and for boys
in the lower grades; the Stuart-Mitchell School, for
girls; the Gleim School, for girls; the Thurston School,
for girls; and the Ursuline Young Ladies’ Academy.
The Phipps Conservatory (horticulture),
the largest in America, and the Hall of Botany are
in Schenley Park and were built by Mr. Henry Phipps.
There is an interesting zooelogical garden in Highland
Park which was founded by Mr. Christopher L. Magee.
The Pittsburgh “Gazette,”
founded July 29, 1786, and consolidated with the Pittsburgh
“Times” (1879) in 1906 as the “Gazette
Times,” is one of the oldest newspapers west
of the Alleghany Mountains. Other prominent newspapers
of the city are the “Chronicle Telegraph”
(1841); “Post” (1842); “Dispatch”
(1846); “Leader” (1870; Sunday, 1864);
“Press” (1883); and the “Sun”
(1906). There are also two German dailies, the
“Volksblatt und Freiheits-Freund”
and the “Pittsburgher Beobachter,”
one Slavonic daily, one Slavonic weekly, two Italian
weeklies, besides journals devoted to society and
the iron, building, and glass trades. The publishing
house of the United Presbyterian Church is located
here, and there are several periodical journals published
by the various religious bodies.
The city has some very attractive
public buildings and office buildings and an unusual
number of beautiful churches. The Allegheny County
Court-House, in the Romanesque style, erected in 1884-88
at a cost of $2,500,000, is one of Henry H. Richardson’s
masterpieces. The Nixon Theater is a notable
piece of architecture. The Post-Office and the
Customs Office are housed in a large Government building
of polished granite.
The city has twenty or more hospitals
for the care of its sick, injured, or insane, ten
of which have schools for the training of nurses.
There is the Western Pennsylvania Institute for the
Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb in Pittsburgh, which
is in part maintained by the State, where trades are
taught as a part of the educational system. The
State also helps to maintain the Western Pennsylvania
Institution for the Blind, the Home for Aged and Infirm
Colored Women, and the Home for Colored Children.
Among other charitable institutions maintained by the
city are the Home for Orphans, Home for the Aged,
Home for Released Convicts, an extensive system of
public baths, the Curtis Home for Destitute Women
and Girls, the Pittsburgh Newsboys’ Home, the
Children’s Aid Society of Western Pennsylvania,
the Protestant Home for Incurables, the Pittsburgh
Association for the Improvement of the Poor, and the
Western Pennsylvania Humane Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals, Children, and Aged Persons.
Under the management of Women’s Clubs several
playgrounds are open to children during the summer,
where competent teachers give instruction to children
over ten years of age in music, manual training, sewing,
cooking, nature study, and color work.
The water supply of Pittsburgh is
taken from the Allegheny River and pumped into reservoirs,
the highest of which is Herron Hill, five hundred
and thirty feet above the river. A slow sand filtration
plant for the filtration of the entire supply is under
construction and a part of it is in operation.
In this last year the Legislature has passed an act
prohibiting the deposit of sewage material in the rivers
of the State, and this tardy action in the interest
of decency and health will stop the ravages of death
through epidemic fevers caught from poisoned streams.
VI
Pittsburgh maintains by popular support
one of the four symphony orchestras in America.
She has given many famous men to science, literature,
and art. Her astronomical observatory is known
throughout the world. Her rich men are often
liberal beyond their own needs, particularly so William
Thaw, who spent great sums for education and benevolence;
Mrs. Mary Schenley, who has given the city a great
park, over four hundred acres in the very heart of
its boundaries; and Henry Phipps, who erected the
largest conservatory for plants and flowers in our
country. There is one other, Andrew Carnegie,
whose wise and continuous use of vast wealth for the
public good is nearly beyond human precedent.
If Pittsburgh people were called upon
to name their best known singer, they would, of course,
with one accord, say Stephen C. Foster. His songs
are verily written in the hearts of millions of his
fellow-creatures, for who has not sung “Old
Folks at Home,” “Nelly Bly,” “My
Old Kentucky Home,” and the others? Ethelbert
Nevin is the strongest name among our musical composers,
his “Narcissus,” “The Rosary,”
and many others being known throughout the world.
Charles Stanley Reinhart, Mary Cassatt,
and John W. Alexander are the best known among our
painters. Henry O. Tanner, the only negro painter,
was born in Pittsburgh and learned the rudiments of
his art here. Albert S. Wall, his son, A. Bryan
Wall, George Hetzel, and John W. Beatty have painted
good pictures, as have another group which includes
William A. Coffin, Martin B. Leisser, Jaspar Lawman,
Eugene A. Poole, Joseph R. Woodwell, William H. Singer,
Clarence M. Johns, and Johanna Woodwell Hailman.
Thomas S. Clarke is a Pittsburgh painter and sculptor.
Philander C. Knox, United States Senator, and John
Dalzell, member of the House of Representatives, are
prominent among those who have served Pittsburgh ably
in the National Government.
VII
And how about letters? Has Pittsburgh
a literature? Those rolling clouds of smoke,
those mighty industries, those men of brawn, those
men of energy, that ceaseless calculation of wages
and dividends can these produce an atmosphere
for letters? It seems unthinkable. Yet hold!
Only the other day on the train a man who has been
a resident of New York for thirty-five years remarked
in this author’s presence that “Pittsburgh
is the most intellectual city in America.”
He had never visited Pittsburgh and the author did
not and does not know his name. “How about
Boston?” asked another traveler. “Boston
used to be, but is not now,” he answered.
Then I, in my timid and artless way, ventured to ask
him why he spoke thus of Pittsburgh. “Because,”
said he, “distant as I am from Pittsburgh, more
inspiration in artistic and intellectual things has
come to me from that city than from any other place
in America.” But that may have been his
dinner or the cigar.
Literature I once attempted to define
as the written record of thought and action.
If this be an adequate definition, then Pittsburgh
writers have substantially enriched the field of literature
in every department, and given our city permanent
fame as a place of letters. As we begin our survey
of the local field, the wonder grows that the literary
production is so large, and that the character of
much of it is so very high. Let Pegasus champ
his golden bit as he may, and beat his hoof upon the
empty air, Pittsburgh men and Pittsburgh women have
ridden the classic steed with grace and skill through
all the flowered deviations of his bridal paths.
This is scarcely the place to attempt a critical estimate,
and it would be an ungracious and a presumptuous task
for me to appraise the literary value of that work
with any great degree of detail. The occasion
will hardly permit more than a list of names and titles;
and while pains have been taken to make this list
complete, it is possible that some books may have
been overlooked, but truly by inadvertence only.
VIII
Perhaps the most important piece of
literature from a local pen is Professor William M.
Sloane’s “Life of Napoleon.”
This is a painstaking and authoritative record of
the great Frenchman who conquered everybody but himself.
Dr. William J. Holland, once chancellor of the University
of Pittsburgh, now director of the Carnegie Museum,
has given to the field of popular science “The
Butterfly Book” an author who knows
every butterfly by its Christian name. Then Andrew
Carnegie’s “Triumphant Democracy”
presents masses of statistics with such lightness of
touch as to make them seem a stirring narrative.
His other books, “An American Four-in-Hand in
Britain” and “Round the World” present
the vivid impressions of a keen traveler. His
“Life of James Watt” conveys a sympathetic
portraiture of the inventor of the steam engine.
His “Gospel of Wealth” is a piece of deep-thinking
discursiveness, although it really seems a superfluous
thesis, for Mr. Carnegie’s best exposition of
the gospel of wealth unfolds itself in two thousand
noble buildings erected all over the world for the
diffusion of literature; in those splendid conceptions,
the Scottish Education Fund; the Washington Carnegie
Institution for Scientific Research; the Pension for
College Professors, which has so much advanced the
dignity and security of teaching; the Pension for
Aged and Disabled Workmen; the Hero Fund, with its
provision of aid to the injured and to the worthy poor;
the many college endowments; and, greater than all,
the Peace Palace at The Hague, through which he will
make his appeal to the conscience of civilization
during all time to organize and extend among the nations
of the earth that system of arbitrated justice which
has been already established within the borders of
each State.
But if I continue to group our Pittsburgh
authors in this arbitrary fashion, those who come
at the end will think I mean the last to be least.
Therefore, let me pursue the theme indiscriminately,
as I meant to do all along had not that same Pegasus,
in spite of my defiance, run away at the very start.
IX
The first Pittsburgh book that I can
find in my hurried review of the field is “Modern
Chivalry,” by Hugh Henry Brackenridge. The
third volume of this book was printed in Pittsburgh
in 1796, the first two having been published in Philadelphia.
This writer’s son, Henry M. Brackenridge, was
also an author, having written “History of the
Late War between the United States and Great Britain,”
“History of the Western Insurrection called
the Whisky Insurrection, 1794,” “Journal
of a Voyage up the River Missouri, Performed in 1811,”
“Recollections of Persons and Places in the
West,” and several other books. Neville
B. Craig wrote a “History of Pittsburgh,”
published in 1851, which is still a work of standard
reference. Another “History of Pittsburgh”
was brought out some ten years ago under the editorship
of Erasmus Wilson, who has also published a volume
of “Quiet Observations,” selected from
his newspaper essays. But the most important,
painstaking, and accurate “History of Pittsburgh”
which has yet been published is the one by Miss Sarah
H. Killikelly, published in 1906. Another book
of hers, “Curious Questions,” is an entertaining
collection of many queer things that have occurred
in the world’s history. Robert P. Nevin
wrote “Black Robes” and “Three Kings.”
Professor Samuel P. Langley was for many years in charge
of the Allegheny Observatory and won fame while here
as a writer on scientific subjects. Also the
first models of his flying machine were made while
he was a resident in Pittsburgh. W. M. Darlington
wrote “Fort Pitt” and edited the journals
of Christopher Gist, who was Washington’s scout
when the Father of his Country first came to Pittsburgh.
“Two Men in the West” is the title of
a little book on travel by W. R. Halpin. Arthur
G. Burgoyne, a newspaper writer, has published “All
Sorts of Pittsburghers.” George Seibel
has written three beautiful plays which have not yet
been produced because the modern stage managers seem
to prefer to produce unbeautiful plays. One of
these is “Omar Khayyam,” which was accepted
and paid for by Richard Mansfield, who died before
he could arrange for its production. Another
is “Christopher Columbus,” and he has
just finished an important tragedy entitled “OEdipus,”
dealing artistically with a horrifying story, which
has been accepted for early production by Mr. Robert
Mantel. Mr. Seibel has published a monograph on
“The Mormon Problem.” Charles P. Shiras
wrote the “Redemption of Labor,” and a
drama, “The Invisible Prince,” which was
played in the old Pittsburgh Theater. Bartley
Campbell was the most prolific writer of plays that
Pittsburgh has yet produced, and his melodramas have
been played in nearly every theater in America.
H. G. Donnelly, well known as a playwright, was also
a Pittsburgher. Mrs. Mary Roberts Rinehart is
a young author who is coming to the front as a writer
of successful dramas, stories, and books. Her
plays, “The Double Life” and “By
Order of the Court” have been produced, and
a novel, “The Circular Staircase,” has
just appeared from the press. My own little play,
“The Brayton Episode,” was played by Miss
Sarah Truax at the Alvin Theater, Pittsburgh, June
24, 1903, and by Miss Eleanor Moretti at the Fifth
Avenue Theater, New York, January 15, 1905.
Rev. W. G. Mackay wrote tales of history
under the title of “The Skein of Life.”
Father Morgan M. Sheedy and Rev. Dr. George Hodges,
who used to strive together in Pittsburgh to surpass
each other in tearing down the walls of religious
prejudice that keep people out of the Kingdom of Heaven,
have each given us several books on social and religious
topics composed on the broad and generous lines of
thought which only such sensible teachers know how
to employ. Among Dr. Hodges’ books are
“Christianity between Sundays,” the “Heresy
of Cain,” and “Faith and Social Service”;
while Father Sheedy has published “Social Topics.”
That devoted student of nature, Dr.
Benjamin Cutler Jillson, wrote a book called “Home
Geology,” and another, “River Terraces
In and Near Pittsburgh,” which carry the fancy
into far-off antiquity. Professor Daniel Carhart,
of the University of Pittsburgh, has given us “Field
Work for Civil Engineers” and “Treatise
on Plane Surveying.” From J. Heron Foster
we have “A Full Account of the Great Fire at
Pittsburgh in 1845.” Adelaide M. Nevin
published “Social Mirror,” and Robert P.
Nevin “Poems,” a book with mood and feeling.
Dr. Stephen A. Hunter, a clergyman, is the author
of an erudite work entitled “Manual of Therapeutics
and Pharmacy in the Chinese Language.”
Walter Scott, who, after taking a
course at the University of Edinburgh, came to Pittsburgh
in 1826, was a very distinguished preacher and author.
His greatest reputation was gained in his work in association
with Alexander Campbell in establishing the principles
of the now mighty congregation known as the Christian,
or Disciples, Church. His books are: “The
Gospel Restored,” “The Great Demonstration,”
and “The Union of Christians.”
A memoir of Professor John L. Lincoln,
by his son, W. L. Lincoln, gives a record of a life
so spent that many men were truly made better thereby.
Father Andrew A. Lambing, President of the Historical
Society of Western Pennsylvania, has written useful
monographs on the early history of this region, and
he is one of the first authorities in that field.
He has also composed books on religious subjects.
E. W. Duckwell wrote “Bacteriology Applied to
the Canning and Preserving of Food Products.”
Richard Realf was a poet “whose
songs gushed from his heart,” and some of them
hold a place in literature. His “Monarch
of the Forges” breathes the deep spirit of industrial
life as he found it in Pittsburgh.
Mr. Lee S. Smith, now (1908) president
of the Chamber of Commerce, has published an interesting
book entitled “Through Egypt to Palestine,”
describing his travels in the Orient.
Our men who have written most knowingly
on industrial topics are James M. Swank and Joseph
D. Weeks. A young writer, Francis Hill, has published
a very readable boys’ story, “Outlaws of
Horseshoe Hole,” and Arthur Sanwood Pier has
published “The Pedagogues,” a novel satirizing
the Harvard Summer School.
Rev. Henry C. McCook’s very
successful novel, “The Latimers,” is an
engaging study of the whisky insurrection of early
Pittsburgh days. Thomas B. Plimpton is remembered
by some as a writer of verse. Judge J. E. Parke
and Judge Joseph Mellon have written historical essays.
Josiah Copley wrote “Gathering Beulah.”
Logan Conway is the author of “Money and Banking.”
He has also written a series of essays on “Evolution.”
Miss Cara Reese has published a little story entitled
“And She Got All That.” Miss Willa
Sibert Cather has just published her “Poems.”
Charles McKnight’s “Old Fort Duquesne;
or Captain Jack the Scout” is a stirring book
that has fired the hearts of many boys who love a good
tale. William Harvey Brown’s story, “On
the South African Frontier,” was written and
published while he was a curator in the Carnegie Museum.
Pittsburgh has produced a group of
standard schoolbooks always of the very
first importance in the literature of any country.
Among these are the books by Andrew Burt and Milton
B. Goff, and a series of readers by Lucius Osgood.
Henry J. Ford’s “Rise
and Growth of American Politics” is a well-studied
work. Henry A. Miller’s “Money and
Bimetallism” is a conscientious statement of
his investigations of that question. Judge Marshall
Brown has written two books, “Bulls and Blunders”
and “Wit and Humor of Famous Sayings.”
Frank M. Bennett’s “Steam Navy of the United
States” is a useful technical work.
L. C. Van Noppen, after pursuing his
studies of Dutch literature in Holland, came to Pittsburgh
and wrote a translation of Vondel’s great Dutch
classical poem “Lucifer.” Vondel published
the original of this work some ten or fifteen years
before Milton’s “Paradise Lost” appeared,
and critics have tried to show by the deadly parallel
column that Milton drew the inspiration for some of
his highest poetical flights from Vondel. It
is probable, however, that Milton was unconscious of
the existence of Vondel’s work.
S. L. Fleishman has translated the
poems of Heine with tenderness and feeling. Ella
Boyce Kirk has written several educational pamphlets.
Morgan Neville published a poem, “Comparisons.”
From that Prince Rupert of the astronomers, Professor
James E. Keeler, who has made more than one fiery
dash across the borderland of known science, we have
“Spectroscopic Observations of Nebulae.”
That truly gifted woman, Margaretta Wade Deland, was
born in Pittsburgh in 1857 and resided here until
her marriage in 1880. Among her books are “John
Ward, Preacher,” “The Story of a Child,”
“Philip and His Wife,” and “Old Chester
Tales.” Jane Grey Swisshelm wrote the recollections
of an eventful experience under the title “Half
a Century of Life.” Nicholas Biddle composed
a studious “Life of Sebastian Cabot,”
and another book, “Modern Chivalry.”
Mrs. Annie Wade has written poems and stories.
The city has fathered many able writers against slavery
and intemperance, among whom was William H. Burleigh,
who wrote “Our Country.” William B.
Conway wrote “Cottage on the Cliff.”
From Rev. John Black we have “The Everlasting
Kingdom,” and Rev. John Tassey published a “Life
of Christ.” William G. Johnston’s
interesting book, “Experiences of a Forty-niner,”
was published in 1892. John Reed Scott has published
two successful novels, “The Colonel of the Red
Hussars” and “Béatrix of Clare.”
Martha Fry Boggs wrote “A Romance of New Virginia.”
Then there are “Polly and I,” by Cora
Thurmston; “Free at Last” and “Emma’s
Triumph,” by Mrs. Jane S. Collins; “Her
Brother Donnard,” by Emily E. Verder; “Essays,”
by Anna Pierpont Siviter; “Human Progress,”
by Thomas S. Blair; “Steel: A Manual for
Steel Users,” a useful monograph by William Metcalf;
and “Memoir of John B. Gibson,” by Colonel
Thomas P. Roberts. Then there are some poor things
from my own pen, if, in order to make the record complete,
I may add them at the end “Oliver
Cromwell: A History” (1894); “John
Marmaduke: A Romance of the English Invasion of
Ireland in 1649” (1897); “Beowulf:
A Poem” (1901); “Penruddock of the White
Lambs,” a novel (1903); “The Brayton Episode,”
a play (1903); “The Sword of the Parliament,”
a play (1907); and this, “A Short History of
Pittsburgh” (1908).
And such is the list. Imperfect
though it may be, it is the best that I have been
able to compose. But how large and full the measure
of it all is! History, biography, philosophy,
religion, nature, science, criticism, government,
coinage and finance, art, poetry, the drama, travel,
adventure, fiction, society, education, all avenues
of human activity, all themes of human speculation,
have been covered in books written with more or less
interest and power by men and women of Pittsburgh.
Much of this volume of production is ephemeral, but
some of it on the other hand is undoubtedly a permanent
addition to the world’s literature.
X
One word more before leaving this
subject. Literature has not until recently enjoyed
that degree of attention from the public press of
Pittsburgh which it deserves. It ought to be the
concern of every human unit in the nation to receive
honest guidance in the development of literature;
for literature, once again, is the written record of
thought and action. Mobs will melt away when
the units in the mob begin to think, and they will
think when they read. Then will the law be paramount,
and then will our institutions be safe. Thousands
of our serious people annually subscribe for literary
reviews of one kind or another in order that they
may follow the rapid expansion of the written record
of the thought and action of the world, when the whole
department might be covered so admirably by our daily
newspapers. Should not the newspaper give each
household practically all it needs in criticism and
information outside of the printed books themselves?
How easily we could spare some of the glaring and
exaggerated headlines over the daily record of crime,
misconduct, and false leadership, which inflame the
mind and the passions with evil fire, and how joyfully
we would welcome instead an intelligent, conscientious,
comprehensive, discriminating, piquant in
short, a masterful discussion from day to day of the
written record of the thought and action of the world
as unfolded in its statesmanship, its oratory, its
education, its heroism, and its literature.
XI
And so my little story of Pittsburgh
comes to an end. It is the story of a great achievement
in the building of a city, and the development of a
community within its boundaries. I have sometimes
heard a sneer at Pittsburgh as a place where undigested
wealth is paramount. I have never beheld the
city in that character. On the contrary, I have,
on frequent occasions, seen the assemblage of men
native here where a goodly section of the brain and
power of the nation was represented. There is
much wealth here, but the dominant spirit of those
who have it is not a spirit of pride and luxury and
arrogance. There is much poverty here, but it
is the poverty of hope which effort and opportunity
will transform into affluence. And especially
is there here a spirit of good fellowship, of help
one to another, and of pride in the progress of the
intellectual life. And with all of these comes
a growth toward the best civic character which in
its aggregate expression is probably like unto the
old Prophet’s idea of that righteousness which
exalteth a nation.