Summer 2025

Gorson Bio and an Exhibit at The Westmoreland
The first two decades of the 20th century were an extraordinary time for Pittsburgh and for the whole world that bought the steel produced in western Pennsylvania’s mills. The Pittsburgh region dominated the world in the production of steel, and that new alloy utterly changed civilization as the new century advanced. The cars, trucks, rails, bridges, skyscrapers and airplanes that heralded a …

On Landscape and Language
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about our western Pennsylvanian landscape and the language we use to describe it — and I found inspiration in a surprising place — a book about the Gaelic language called “Thirty-Two Words for Field: Lost Words of the Irish Landscape,” by Manchan Magan. Magan tells us that there are …

Ralph Kiner and the FBI
Though he was regarded as one of the most fearsome sluggers in Major League Baseball, Ralph Kiner did step aside once for a “pinch hitter.” An FBI agent. The Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder was the focus of an extortion plot in the summer of 1952. He was instructed in a letter to deliver $6,200 to an …

The Feminine Mystique
Not every client gives an interior designer carte blanche and a generous budget to create the home of their dreams. In fact, it’s a rare client indeed who displays that level of trust and assurance. But Amanda Walton asked Alisha Gwen to do just that, beginning with the plans for her new home being built …

Black-Throated Green Warbler
The dinosaurs have returned! Birds are, by dint of evolution, a living link to dinosaurs. To remind ourselves of that, we need look no further than the Black-throated Green Warbler, a species that returned to western Pennsylvania in early April from as far south as Venezuela and Columbia and has been nesting and raising young …

Go West (to Cleveland) and Rock the Night Away
As the Rolling Stones sang, “I know, it’s only rock and roll, but I like it.” In fact, LOTS of people love it. 2025 marks the 30th anniversary of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, which attracts over a half-million visitors annually who come to reminisce, learn and share their love of music with the …

A Summer Stroll to Northwestern Wetlands and Wildflowers
About a 90-minute drive north of Pittsburgh, there is a beautiful location for hiking and exploring outdoors: the Helen B. Katz Natural Area, just outside Meadville. Access to this preserve is easy from I-79 North and a short drive from one of the Meadville interstate exits. The 550-acre preserve includes varied terrain that visitors can …
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Steering through Chaotic Markets
Editor’s note: We asked a group of leading Pittsburgh-area wealth managers to give their answers to two questions facing investors. Each expert answers one of the questions below. Question 1: The Trump Administration’s often-chaotic tariff policies have caused a significant decline in U.S. stocks. Should investors lighten up on stocks in anticipation of more turmoil, …

75 Years Ago the Renaissance Began
The official start to Pittsburgh’s long-cherished ambition to become a Most Livable City took place on the grey-skied afternoon of May 18, 1950, and it was noisy. At a shouted signal from Pennsylvania Gov. James Duff, an 1,800-pound wrecking ball slammed into a 103-year-old vacant brick warehouse on Exchange Way between Liberty and Penn avenues …

An Opportunity for Each of Us
It’s been 23 years since the saga of the discarded toilet. I lived in Squirrel Hill then, and each day as I drove Downtown to work at the Post-Gazette, I followed the same path as thousands of other motorists, coming through Oakland, exiting the Boulevard of the Allies down and to the right via a …