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Allen Dieterich-Ward - Beyond Rust: Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial America (Politics and Culture in Modern America)

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Allen Dieterich-Ward Beyond Rust: Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial America (Politics and Culture in Modern America)
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Beyond Rust chronicles the rise, fall, and rebirth of metropolitan Pittsburgh, an industrial region that once formed the heart of the worlds steel production and is now touted as a model for reviving other hard-hit cities of the Rust Belt. Writing in clear and engaging prose, historian and area native Allen Dieterich-Ward provides a new model for a truly metropolitan history that integrates the urban core with its regional hinterland of satellite cities, white-collar suburbs, mill towns, and rural mining areas.

Pittsburgh reached its industrial heyday between 1880 and 1920, as vertically integrated industrial corporations forged a regional community in the mountainous Upper Ohio River Valley. Over subsequent decades, metropolitan population growth slowed as mining and manufacturing employment declined. Faced with economic and environmental disaster in the 1930s, Pittsburghs business elite and political leaders developed an ambitious program of pollution control and infrastructure development. The public-private partnership behind the Pittsburgh Renaissance, as advocates called it, pursued nothing less than the selective erasure of the existing social and physical environment in favor of a modernist, functionally divided landscape: a goal that was widely copied by other aging cities and one that has important ramifications for the broader national story. Ultimately, the Renaissance vision of downtown skyscrapers, sleek suburban research campuses, and bucolic regional parks resulted in an uneven transformation that tore the urban fabric while leaving deindustrializing river valleys and impoverished coal towns isolated from areas of postwar growth.

Beyond Rust is among the first books of its kind to continue past the collapse of American manufacturing in the 1980s by exploring the diverse ways residents of an iconic industrial region sought places for themselves within a new economic order.

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BEYOND RUST
POLITICS AND CULTURE IN MODERN AMERICA
Series Editors: Margot Canaday, Glenda Gilmore, Michael Kazin, Stephen Pitti, Thomas J. Sugrue
Volumes in the series narrate and analyze political and social change in the broadest dimensions from 1865 to the present, including ideas about the ways people have sought and wielded power in the public sphere and the language and institutions of politics at all levelslocal, national, and transnational. The series is motivated by a desire to reverse the fragmentation of modern U.S. history and to encourage synthetic perspectives on social movements and the state, on gender, race, and labor, and on intellectual history and popular culture.
BEYOND RUST
Metropolitan Pittsburgh and the Fate of Industrial America
Allen Dieterich-Ward
PENN
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
PHILADELPHIA
Copyright 2016 University of Pennsylvania Press
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.
Published by
University of Pennsylvania Press
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112
www.upenn.edu/pennpress
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Dieterich-Ward, Allen, author.
Beyond rust : metropolitan Pittsburgh and the fate of industrial America / Allen Dieterich-Ward.
pages cm (Politics and culture in modern America)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8122-4767-1 (alk. paper)
1. Urban renewalPennsylvaniaPittsburgh20th century. 2. Pittsburgh (Pa.)Economic conditions20th century. 3. Pittsburgh Metropolitan Area (Pa.)Economic conditions20th century. 4. Community developmentPennsylvaniaPittsburgh. 5. Urban renewalUnited StatesCase studies. 6. Community development, UrbanUnited StatesCase studies. I. Title. II. Series: Politics and culture in modern America.
HT177.P5D54 2016
307.34160974886dc23 2015017684
CONTENTS
PROLOGUE
This book is about a working landscape and its people, in which more than a century of hard use has eroded the distinction between the natural and the man-made. It began as an attempt to reconcile two competing visions from my childhood on the edge of metropolitan Pittsburgh. I often heard stories from my paternal grandparents about Egypt Valley, a nearby farming hamlet in the rolling hills of southeastern Ohio where they were raised. Their memories of bountiful harvests and social ties forged through the local church, school, and Grange Hall stood in sharp contrast to the area I knew from the 1980s, which had been largely abandoned by its inhabitants and deeply scarred by Consolidation Coal Company (Consol)s enormous Egypt Valley Mine that opened there in the mid-1960s. This was now a landscape of cliff-like highwalls that rose more than a hundred feet above scrub-grass plains; of spoil banks and strip pits interspersed with the ghostly remnants of crumbling farmhouses, rusting machinery, and a hilltop cemetery around which former residents still gathered for yearly reunions.
I found out later that the fate of Egypt Valley was bound up with that of Pittsburgh, where Consol was headquartered, and that the city and its suburbs had their own landscapes to interpret. In fact, at the same time the mining company was rearranging Egypt Valleys social and physical topography, some of its executives and largest shareholders were partnering with civic leaders to do the same thing downtown. In place of the messy, mixed-use, and increasingly shabby neighborhoods that had emerged over the previous century, the regions economic and political elite envisioned a modern, rational, and productive environment that could compete with other regions. As in the countryside, the urban and suburban architecture, infrastructure, and, yes, the rivers, air and ground itself revealed the political struggles over community control, of changes in technology and transportation systems, of shifting national and international economics, and of the vagaries of natural processes. It was clear that, whether viewed from the center city looking out or from the countryside looking in, telling the story of metropolitan Pittsburgh required embracing the full panorama.
As the title Beyond Rust suggests, this book begins with the origins of metropolitan Pittsburgh as the worlds most important industrial center and ends by extending the story past hulking ruins of steel mills, mine tipples, and abandoned rail lines that formed the backdrop of my childhood. Working landscapes and the communities they nurture, after all, seldom simply disappear either in the face of environmental degradation or job losses, and the residents of metropolitan Pittsburgh have a particularly strong attachment to their region. I came across many heroes in my travels throughout this area, but even after dozens of oral histories and many years spent in the archives, I have found few clear-cut villains. This is not to say I agreed with all of the ideas espoused by the figures in the following pages, not by a long shot. But my personal and professional background has perhaps made me more sympathetic to a wider range of perspectives than might be the norm. In order to finance his dream of owning a farm, my father went to work as a coal miner, which provided the economic base on which I, an ardent environmentalist, went to college. For their part, my grandparents enjoyed a comfortable retirement after selling the coal rights to their property in the 1980s, which they were able to continue farming thanks to more stringent reclamation laws passed, in part, due to the public outcry over the Egypt Valley mine. The histories of urban renewal and suburban expansion require a similar level of nuance; for every project completed or thwarted, those on both sides were often full of good intentions.
Introduction. The City and Its Region
When I was a kid growing up on a southeastern Ohio farm, I remember most about the hour and a half drive to downtown Pittsburgh the moment when our family car burst from the darkness of the Fort Pitt Tunnel into the sunlight dazzling off the swath of skyscrapers suddenly spread before us near the point where the Monongahela and Allegheny Rivers meet. As I now travel west on the turnpike from my home in central Pennsylvania, the city reveals itself more gradually. The first billboards promoting Pittsburgh and Its Countryside begin to appear at about the point where the highway merges with Interstate 70 for the rugged journey through the Allegheny Mountains. If I am driving in winter, the forecast may well be Seasonable with a 100% chance of fun, a prediction highlighting the ski resorts of the Laurel Highlands just ahead. A little farther along, its Exit 91 for Whitewater Fun! at Ohiopyle State Park during the summer, while signs for the Carnegie Science Center roboworld exhibit assert the citys status as a high-tech hub.
The route we are traveling is itself a lingering testament to Pittsburghs industrial power, originally blasted through the mountains by Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick and Cornelius Vanderbilt in their war with the mighty Pennsylvania Railroad. Heading up the miles-long ascent to the Eastern Continental Divide, a roadside sign just before the entrance to the Allegheny Mountain Tunnel marks the boundary between the Chesapeake Bay and Ohio River watersheds. Shortly after this geographical transition, I know for certain I have arrived on the edge of metropolitan Pittsburgh when the six enormous wind turbines of the Somerset Wind Farm come into view along the southern ridge. As a symbol of the regions vaunted economic transformation, however, this
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