Author: Father Pitt

  • Landscape, Chartiers Cemetery

    Landscape in Chartiers Cemetery

    Evening sun casts shadows from fine old trees in Chartiers Cemetery.

  • Dinsmore Obelisk, Chartiers Cemetery

    A typical marble obelisk of the Civil War era. The inscriptions are eroded into near illegibility, but one legible death date is 1840. Since the cemetery is not that old, the monument was probably put up in the 1860s, and previously deceased family members were honored on it then.

  • Duncan Mausoleum, Union Dale Cemetery

    There is nothing else remotely like this in Pittsburgh. This huge mausoleum supports a towering shaft with a recording angel at the top taking notes. It was designed by Theophilus P. Chandler Jr. (which always sounds to old Pa Pitt like the name of the villain in a Marx Brothers farce), the tastemaker of Philadelphia, and the architect of First Presbyterian Church downtown.

  • Louis Knoepp Monument, St. Paul’s Lutheran Cemetery, Mount Oliver

    Louis Knoepp died in 1895 at the age of 40, and either he had already made enough of a fortune that this expense seemed appropriate to his heirs, or he came from a family with plenty of money already. The amateurish allegorical wreath-bearing statue on top suggests a client with more money than taste, but if the message to be delivered was that Louis Knoepp was the richest man in the cemetery, then the message has been delivered. Old Pa Pitt suspects that this monument was chosen from a monument dealer’s illustrated catalogue, forcing the monument dealer to come up with a monument he had never actually expected to have to build for anyone.

  • Schnuth Monument, Mount Lebanon Cemetery

    If you want to be buried under a pyramid but don’t want to be ostentatious about it, this is your monument.