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File #: 2005-1694    Version: 1
Type: Proclamation Status: Adopted
File created: 9/13/2005 In control: City Council
On agenda: Final action:
Enactment date: 9/13/2005 Enactment #: 534
Effective date:    
Title: NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Council of the City of Pittsburgh congratulates Chatham Village on being named a National Historic Landmark and thanks them for preserving a part of the history of the City. BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that Friday, September 16, 2005 is declared "CHATHAM VILLAGE DAY" in the City of Pittsburgh.
Sponsors: Dan Deasy, All Members
Indexes: PROCLAMATION - MR. DEASY
Attachments: 1. 2005-1694.doc
Presenter
Presented by Mr. Deasy
WHEREAS, Chatham Village is a cooperative residential community in the Mt. Washington Section of the City of Pittsburgh and has received the prestigious honor of being designated a National Historic Landmark; and

WHEREAS, Chatham Village lies within the "Penn's Woods" tract of land granted to William Penn by King Charles II of England in 1681, the land and much of the surrounding area was later purchased by Major Abraham Kirkpatrick, a Revolutionary War officer and Pittsburgh alderman, from the Penn heirs; and

WHEREAS, the Major's granddaughter Maria Louisa Bigham, eventually was bequeathed a section of the hilltop property including the Village acreage, where she and her husband Thomas crowned the wooded rise with a spacious home in 1849; and

WHEREAS, the mansion and surrounding property, now known as Chatham Village, were retained by the Bigham family until 1931, when Pittsburgh's Buhl Foundation purchased the holdings as an experiment to provide high-quality housing in a garden setting for middle-income families and provide a reasonable return to the Foundation; and

WHEREAS, Chatham Village was originally the inspiration of Dr. Charles F. Lewis, the first director of the Buhl Foundation, who consulted with America's preeminent community planning team of Clarence Stein and Henry Wright, with the architects for the final work being Charles T. Ingham and William Boyd, along with landscape architects Ralph E. Griswold and Theodore M. Kohankie; and

WHEREAS, the Village consists of 216 residences; the first 129 units were begun in 1932 and an additional 68 units opened in 1936 with the final stage being a three-story apartment building with 19 apartments which opened in 1956; and

WHEREAS, in 1960, the Buhl Foundation concluded that its experiment had succeeded and sold the village to the residents who had formed a cooperative; and

WHEREAS, on April 7, 2005 Chatham Village was designated a National Historic Landm...

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