Downtown Greensburg Historic District

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Downtown Greensburg Historic District
(U.S. Registered Historic District)
Location: Greensburg, Pennsylvania
Area: 218 acres
Added to NRHP: 1995[1]
NRHP Reference#: 95000884[1]

The Downtown Greensburg Historic District of Greensburg, Pennsylvania, is bounded approximately by Tunnel Street, Main Street, Third Street, and Harrison Avenue.[2] It consists of 62 buildings on 218 acres, with the most notable buildings from the years 1872-1930. The district's oldest structure (1872) is the former Masonic Temple at 132 South Main Street. The Academy Hill Historic District is directly to the north of downtown Greensburg.

Downtown Greensburg was once a significant retailing center, serving numerous small communities in central Westmoreland County. Not only was it an important station on the Pennsylvania Railroad, but it was also the headquarters of West Penn Railways, an interurban (long-distance trolley) company serving many small communities to the east and south of Greensburg. The headquarters building of West Penn Railways is still extant at 416 South Main Street, serving as City Hall, although it is outside the boundaries of the historic district. These forms of rail transportation contributed to Greensburg's growth in the pre-automobile era.

Greensburg's largest department store was Troutman's (202-226 South Main Street), the only downtown building to have escalators. Other department stores included Royer's (114 South Main Street) and Sears (101 North Main Street). All three structures remain standing, converted to other uses. The opening of Greengate Mall in 1965 (now demolished) had a devastating impact on downtown retailing, following the pattern that occurred in numerous communities. However, the presence of the courthouse continues to give purpose to downtown, and a significant number of historic properties remain.

Contents

[edit] Notable Buildings by Street

[edit] Ehalt Street

  • Greensburg Train Station (101 Ehalt Street, at corner of Harrison Avenue) was designed by architect William Cookman for the Pennsylvania Railroad in a style that has been described as Jacobean Revival.[3] The Pennsylvania Railroad initiated service to Greensburg in 1852, and a temporary structure served as a station for a few years. In 1860, a one-story red brick station, measuring 55 by 29 feet, was constructed, and passengers walked across the tracks to board westbound trains. In the early 1900s the railroad was expanded from two tracks to four tracks, and the tracks were elevated to create a more nearly level right-of-way for locomotives. These changes necessitated a new station, which is the current structure. When it opened in 1911, four active tracks passed by the station, and there were two passenger platforms, one platform serving two eastbound tracks and one platform serving two westbound tracks. The station measures 115 by 49 feet, and the adjoining baggage facility measures 59 by 26 feet.[4] The station is on a level below the tracks, so that passengers would walk though a pedestrian tunnel and then up stairs to one of the two platforms. There was also a freight elevator that served one of the two platforms. (Two elevators now exist to ensure that people using wheelchairs can access both platforms.) Currently, there are only two tracks passing through the station, each served by a separate platform. Amtrak provides regular passenger train service. The building is now owned by the Westmoreland Cultural Trust. The old waiting room has been renovated for use as a restaurant, and the old baggage facility is currently rented as offices.

[edit] Harrison Avenue

  • Penn Towers (137 Harrison Avenue), formerly the Penn-Albert Hotel, opened in 1922 and is one of the city's tallest structures, now used as housing for senior citizens. It has a red brick facade and some art deco details. The building has 8 to 11 floors, depending on whether certain mezzanine-type floors or half-floors are counted. From the main entrance on Harrison Avenue, the hotel patron would walk though a short arcade lined with shops, and go up a half-flight of stairs to the lobby, which adjoined a restaurant. A ballroom was on the mezzanine level, and at the very top there was a roof garden for dancing and other events, originally open on the sides, and later entirely enclosed. The hotel had originally been owned by the J. A. Sheetz family.

[edit] Main Street

In order from north to south:

  • Christ Episcopal Church (145 North Main Street) is a sandstone structure in a Gothic Revival style, dating from 1889.
  • Union Trust Building (102 North Main Street) is a two story red brick building with classical details built in 1921, that once served as bank and office facilities, including the headquarters of the Westmoreland-Fayette Coal and Coke Company. The Westmoreland Cultural Trust acquired the building in 2004. In its current state, the building has various retail and professional tenants, as well as a conference center operated by the Trust.[5]
  • Sears Department Store (101 North Main Street), now used as offices, is a two-story brick Classical Revival structure built approximately in 1930.
  • Bank and Trust Building (41 North Main Street) is a four-story 1896 Romanesque Revival building.
  • Westmoreland County Courthouse (2 North Main Street) is the county's fourth courthouse, built 1906-08. It is remarkable for its dome, reminiscent of the U.S. Capitol, and for its interior atrium dominated by a grand staircase. Architect William Kauffman designed the building in a style that has been variously described as Beaux Arts, Italian Renaissance, and French Renaissance. The exterior has a granite facade, and the interior has 15 wall and ceiling murals by artist Maurice Ingres.
  • Barclay-Westmoreland Trust (1 North Main Street), later Mellon Bank and Citizens' Bank, has a limestone facade in a Classical Revival style.
  • First National Bank (111 South Main Street), later Southwest Bank, is a seven-story red brick building in a Classical Revival style.
  • Masonic Temple Building (132 South Main Street) is a four story building with an Italianate cast iron facade, now used as law offices. Built in 1872, it is the oldest building in the historic district.
  • Troutman's Department Store (202-226 South Main Street) was once the city's largest department store, now used for offices and seniors' housing. It has six stories with a limestone and terracotta facade in an Italianate style. The main portion was designed by Paul Bartholomew and built in 1923, with more recent additions to the south and west, extending through to South Pennsylvania Avenue.
  • Coulter Building (231 South Main Street) is a four story building with stores on the first floor and offices on the upper floors. It was built in 1903, and served as a temporary courthouse during the construction of the current courthouse.

[edit] Otterman Street

This street is named after Ludwig Otterman, an early settler.

  • Palace Theater (21 West Otterman Street), formerly the Manos Theater, is a three story red brick structure with some art deco characteristics that has been restored for use as a live entertainment venue. Originally, this 1926 building had apartments on the second and third floors, shops and theater lobby on the first floor, and a combination billiard hall and bowling alleys in the basement. On the east side of the Palace Theater, an adjoining theater (variously known as the Lomison Opera House, the Keaggy Theatre, and the Strand Theater) was torn down to provide space for a courtyard and auxiliary facilities for the Palace Theater.
  • Stark / James Building is a three story brick building at the corner of West Otterman Street and Harrison Avenue. The older portion is the Stark Hotel (35, 39, and 41 West Otterman Street), built in 1889 and later known as the Merchants Hotel, and still later known as the New Merchants Hotel.[6] The extreme eastern segment of the building was originally a house belonging to a Mrs. C. H. Stark, and it likely predates the 1889 date attributed to the Stark Hotel as a whole. The hotel originally appealed to traveling salesmen, and in its final years it provided cheap accommodations for elderly tenants. The Westmoreland Cultural Trust acquired the building in 2001, and tastefully renovated it for retail and office use. An adjacent building, the James Building (33 West Otterman Street), was acquired by the Westmoreland Cultural Trust in 1996, and the two structures are managed as a single building.

[edit] Pennsylvania Avenue

  • Greensburg Hempfield Area Library (237 South Pennsylvania Avenue), formerly the U.S. Post Office, is a two-story red brick Greek Classical structure at the corner of West Third Street and South Pennsylvania Avenue. It was built in 1911 and converted to library use in 1969.

[edit] Pittsburgh Street

Note that if the streets had been named logically, Pittsburgh Street would have been First Street. There is no First Street in Greensburg.

  • Cope Hotel was one of Greensburg's oldest hotels, built in 1893, a Romanesque Revival red brick building with three stories, plus an attic level and a basement level with retail outlets fronting on South Pennsylvania Avenue. Its upper floors are currently unused.

[edit] See Also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b National Register Information System. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (1995).
  2. ^ National Register of Historic Places, Historic Districts in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/PA/Westmoreland/districts.html
  3. ^ Westmoreland Cultural Trust, Greensburg Train Station, http://www.westmorelandculturaltrust.org/greensburg_train.htm
  4. ^ Library of Congress, "Built in America" database, http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/habs_haer/
  5. ^ Westmoreland Cultural Trust, Union Trust Building, http://www.westmorelandculturaltrust.org/union_trust.htm
  6. ^ Westmoreland Cultural Trust, Stark/James Building, http://www.westmorelandculturaltrust.org/stark_james.htm

[edit] External Links