This book addresses the evolution of the Shalercrest Defense Housing Project, as a major neighborhood in Shaler Township, a suburb outside of downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This history should be maintained for future generations to see how life in these government sponsored Defense Housing Projects was during the 1940s and 1950s post-World War II era. In addition, the author hopes to fill in some of the missing local history of this significant Shaler Township neighborhood, since no information was available in its public library.

The research for this book comes from a wide variety of sources – Minute Books from Shaler Township, Etna Borough, Allegheny County Housing Authority, and Shalercrest Housing Association, along with Allegheny County Real Estate Office (Deed Records), Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, Hillman Library, Frick Memorial Library, Smithsonian Pittsburgh, Heinz History Center, The National Archives and Records Administration at College Park, Maryland, and Cornell University, and Clarence Stein Archives. In addition, a number of newspaper articles and published papers during the early 1940s and 1950s were helpful in gathering the information for this book.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

“Our family moved to Shalercrest in 1944. My father worked in the defense industry as a welder and fitter at the Dravo Corporation (Shipyard) on Neville Island in Pittsburgh, building Landing Ship Tanks (LST) for World War II. The early residents of Shalercrest made very valuable and important contributions to the war effort through their work in the local defense industries. These residents, as well as the veterans, were employed in the defense related industries in the immediate northern Pittsburgh area. This fact would be long lost without some reflection on the purpose of these Defense Housing Projects.

Shalercrest was my home from the early 1940s through the early 1960s in the upper part, the final units completed during construction, which started in late 1941. Shalercrest was a very close neighborhood of families with many children involved in self-made daily activities. This included creating fun times through imagination, teamwork, and independence. I am deeply gratified that the friends that I grew up with in Shalercrest developed into productive citizens who gained much success in their chosen field of endeavor.”