Braddock

Of all of the old steel towns around Pittsburgh, Pa., Braddock can easily make the claim as the steel industry’s ground zero. It is where the steelmaking industry in Western Pennsylvania was born and 30 years after its collapse, it stands as a monument to the resulting depression and decay.

Located in the eastern suburbs of Pittsburgh on the Monongahela River, the borough is named for Revolutionary War General Edward Braddock.

In 1873, Andrew Carnegie built the Edgar Thomson Steel Works in what is now North Braddock. The plant was Carnegie’s first steel mill. Named after J. Edgar Thomson, who was president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, it was one of the first American steel mills to use the Bessemer process. It remains in operation today, albeit running at a reduced capacity, as a part of the U.S. Steel Corporation’s Mon (Monongahela) Valley Works.

[aesop_image imgwidth=”1000px” img=”http://searchingfordreamstreet.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/201604220219.jpg” align=”center” lightbox=”on” caption=”View of the Edgar Thomson Works from North Braddock, Pa. Active since 1872, the mill is currently owned by U.S. Steel and is part of the Mon Valley Works. The plant was Andrew Carnegie’s first steel mill and was named after J. Edgar Thomson, who was the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad.” captionposition=”left”]

Carnegie, also a philanthropist, opened the first of his 1,689 libraries in the United States in Braddock in 1889. It was the second Carnegie Library in the United States to be commissioned and was the first of only four libraries that he fully endowed. In 1893, an addition doubled the size of the building and included the third Carnegie Music Hall in the United States.

Braddock followed the same fate of the other mill towns with the collapse of the steel industry in the 1970s and 1980s, with businesses collapsing and unemployment rampant. Coinciding with the crack cocaine epidemic of the early 1980s, the combination nearly destroyed the community.

In 1988, Braddock was designated a financially distressed municipality under Pennsylvania’s Act 47. Although Braddock still languishes in Act 47 almost 30 years later, the borough of North Braddock, which didn’t enter Act 47 until 1995, was able to pull out of the program in 2003.

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Once a bustling town with dozens of churches, schools, theaters, furniture stores, restaurants and breweries all squeezed into less than one square mile, today the town struggles with 30% unemployment, home prices around $5,000, and a median household income of $17,000. Ninety percent of the businesses and homes are abandoned or demolished and the population hovers around 2,000 – down from 20,000 in the 70’s.

But in all this poverty and decay, there are people fighting to bring Braddock back from the dead.

For the last 11 years, Mayor John Fetterman and his wife Gisele, have worked tirelessly to rebuild the town.

An alumni of Big Brothers and Big Sisters and AmeriCorps, Fetterman, who has a graduate degree in public policy from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government earns $150 a month as Braddock’s mayor, but does not take the money for himself and instead, directs it to community needs.

Fetterman has been known to purchase abandoned homes for people in need and once bought a two-bedroom house for $15,000 and then sold it to a resident for $1.

[aesop_image imgwidth=”1000px” img=”http://searchingfordreamstreet.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/201604210339.jpg” align=”center” lightbox=”on” caption=”Gisele Fetterman carries her son August outside of the Free Store in Braddock, Pa. Opened in 2012 by Gisele Fetterman, wife of Braddock Mayor John Fetterman, and housed in a shipping container on donated property, the store collects overstock supplies such as clothing and food and provides them to needy people in the community free of charge. The rules of the store are simple: Be kind. Take only what you need, and pay it forward.” captionposition=”left”]

The Free Store, the passion of Fetterman’s wife Gisele, is a no-charge thrift store run out of shipping containers off Braddock main thoroughfare.

Opened in 2012 and partnered with organizations such as Heritage Community Initiatives and a New York City-based organization called Kids in Distressed Situations (KIDS), the store collects overstock supplies such as clothing and food and provides them to needy people in the community free of charge.

The rules of the store are simple: Be kind. Take only what you need, and pay it forward.

Mayor John, as he likes to be called, started a nonprofit organization called Braddock Redux, financed until recently primarily by family money and bought a vacant church in 2003 with the intention of renovating it for community use. The Nyia Page Braddock Community Center is named for Nyia Page, a 23-month-old Rankin girl who died of exposure and hypothermia in 2007 after being outside in single-digit temperatures for more than a day. Her father, William Page, was found guilty of first-degree murder and aggravated indecent assault.

Fetterman also began the Braddock Youth Project (BYP) which is a youth work training program that seeks to foster skills that will aid youth in advancing toward positive life outcomes.

Since its inception in 2006, one of the projects undertaken by BYP youth is planting and maintaining gardens at three locations in Braddock. All three sites were converted, by BYP youth, from vacant lots.

MORE TO COME…

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5 thoughts on “Braddock”

  1. Very nice Pictures. I lived in Braddock from 1949 until 1972, when I got married at SS.Peter & Paul B.C. Church
    I am glad to see Braddock making a come back. Thanks for sharing!

  2. (VIA THE WASHINGTON POST)

    I am writing, because I was born in Braddock, PA, on November 23, 1946. I am African-American. I was raised in Braddock and graduated from Pitt in 1968 and Dickinson School of Law, in Carlisle, PA in 1972. I know this story personally. Growing up in Braddock, I saw only dead end jobs for me and decided an education was my way out. Anyone, who grew up in Pgh and also Pennsylvania, could see the decline of the manufacturing age, beginning in the 1960s.

    The city fathers were in the grip of the steel industry and did nothing to diversify their tax base. The monopolization by one industry to the exclusion of any other job creation results in the kind of devastation we see today. The jobs will never come back in manufacturing.

    I am a committed trade unionist and believe unions are the savior of the middle and working class. We need to be talking, talking, talking about education and retraining people with higher technology skills.

    The bitterness of these residents is misplaced. Their local elected officials and congressional representatives need to begin talking the hard truths. Hope and the future is in bringing new businesses, maybe wooing the information technology, health, and financial industry. I know this is not easy, but they must start somewhere. The old steel manufacturing and coal industry will not return to its former state.

    Barbara B. Hutchinson

  3. I wonder, with all your talent, that you did not consider the town of Hazelwood in the stories. I lived there as a child and later, as I attended Duquesne University. My grandmother had a beauty shop, Helen’s at 5426 Second AVenue and I attended St. Stephen’s church and school. Now her block is completed effaced. No buildings remain.

    1. Hi Carol. I am planning on doing some work in Hazelwood. So much yet to do in this project. I still need to explore the towns along the Allegheny. If you have any suggestions of places to go in Hazelwood where the old timers hang out, places to find examples of ethnic traditions being preserved and/or any remnants of the steel industry, please let me know! Thanks for looking.

  4. (just tried emailing, but it bounced back… just this: Hey Pete- just saw your project again and i have to say, “Bravo!” i’m originally from Youngstown, Ohio, my grandparent’s from near Dubois, Pa… lately I’ve been feeling so homesick. Seeing your images… so many emotions and memories. I am so haunted by my home, and miss it so. Thanks for the project. All the best. Vaughn

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