Pittsburgh World Firsts: By Event
- African-Americans: Derrick Bell -- 1990
- Derrick Bell, first African-American professor at Harvard University
to receive tenure. Bell is a Pittsburgh native from the Hill District.
- Source: New Pittsburgh Courier, 2 May 1990.
- Source: New Pittsburgh Courier, 2 May 1990.
- Air Pollution Disaster: Donora -- 27 October 1948
- Donora, Pennsylvania, was the first recorded air pollution disaster
in the United States.
- Source: Morning Herald Evening Standard, 16 April 1970.
- Source: Morning Herald Evening Standard, 16 April 1970.
- Aluminum-Faced Building: Alcoa -- 1 August 1953
- First aluminum-faced skyscraper was the Alcoa Building, a 30-story,
410 foot structure. Exterior walls were thin stamped
aluminum panels.
- Note: Company had previously built a 4 1/2-story administration building at Davenport, Iowa (1948).
- Source: Aluminum Company of America, "Aluminum on the Skyline."
- Note: Company had previously built a 4 1/2-story administration building at Davenport, Iowa (1948).
- Atomic-Powered Electric Plant: Shippingport -- December 1957
- The world's first full-scale atomic-powered plant for production of
electricity was opened at Shippingport, Pennsylvania, for the Duquesne
Light Company.
- Source: Popular Science Monthly, August 1958.
- Source: Popular Science Monthly, August 1958.
- Banana Split: Latrobe -- 1904
- The banana split was invented by Dr. David
Strickler, a pharmacist, at Strickler's Drug Store in Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
- Sources: The Pittsburgh Press, 5 September 1986, p. B1;
- Undercover Club Newsletter, August 1993, p. 4.
- Sources: The Pittsburgh Press, 5 September 1986, p. B1;
- Big Mac: Uniontown -- 1967
- Created by M. J. "Jim" Delligatti at his Uniontown, Fayette County,
McDonald's. Thereafter introduced "to three of his other McDonald's in
Pittsburgh. After test marketing, the item began appearing on every
McDonald's menu nationwide by 1968."
- Source: The Tribune-Review, 5 May 1993, p. B1.
- Source: The Tribune-Review, 5 May 1993, p. B1.
- Bingo -- circa 1920s
- "Originated in Pittsburgh by Hugh J. Ward. Mr. Ward began running the
game at carnivals in the early 1920s and took it nationwide in 1924. He
secured a copyright on the game and wrote a book of Bingo rules in 1933.
- Source: Undercover Club Newsletter, August 1993, p. 4.
- Bridge, Wire Cable Suspension -- May 1845
- Marked the opening date of the first wire cable suspension aqueduct
bridge in the world. Built by John Augustus Roebling, it spanned the
Allegheny River at 11th Street. It had 7 spans of 160
feet each, consisting of a wooden trunk to hold water and
supported by a continuous wire cable on each side 7
inches in diameter.
- Source: Bridges of Pittsburgh, (qr917.4886 W63).
- Carnegie Hero Fund Commission -- 12 March 1904
- This date marks the establishment of the Hero Fund, for it was then
that Andrew Carnegie transferred 5 million dollars in first collateral 5
percent bonds of the U. S. Steel Corporation. The by-laws were adopted 20
May 1904 in Pittsburgh. The first award was a bronze medal which was
presented to Louis A. Bauman, Jr., 17, a laborer, who saved Charles
Stevick, 16, also a laborer, from drowning (near Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania).
- Source: Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, 27 February 1954.
- Source: Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, 27 February 1954.
- Ferris Wheel: George W. Ferris -- 1892/1893
- The first Ferris Wheel was in operation at the World's Fair
(Columbian Exposition) in Chicago. 264 feet high, more than 2,000 passengers
at a load, it was invented by civil engineer, George Washington Gale Ferris
(1859-1896), a native of Pittsburgh (204 Arch Street, North Side).
- Sources: The Pittsburgh Press, 1 August 1954, p. 5;
- The Pittsburgh Press, 19 April 1959;
- Guide to the State Historical Markers of Pennsylvania, 1991, p. 130.
- Sources: The Pittsburgh Press, 1 August 1954, p. 5;
- Gas Station: Gulf -- 1 December 1913
- Built by Gulf Refining Company at Baum Boulevard and St. Clair Street
in East Liberty. It was designed by J. H. Giesey.
- Sources: Gulf Oil Corporation;
- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 16 September 1980, p. 17.
- Sources: Gulf Oil Corporation;
- Holiday, Saturday -- 1 June 1881
- First Saturday half holiday was inaugurated in U. S. by George
Westinghouse, the inventor, who established the custom in his factory.
- Source: A Life of George Westinghouse, (r92 W568p), p. 294-295.
- Source: A Life of George Westinghouse, (r92 W568p), p. 294-295.
- Hospital, Federal -- 1778
- Hand Hospital opened. This was the first federal hospital built in
America, and, for 64 years was the only medical institution west of the
Alleghenies. (While the city's first real hospital, Hand was not a
general hospital.)
- Source: Pittsburgh's Fortresses of Health, (r362.1P6744).
- Source: Pittsburgh's Fortresses of Health, (r362.1P6744).
- Industries: Air Brake -- April 1869
- In the first practical demonstration, an air brake train made a trip
from Union Station in Pittsburgh to Steubenville.
- Source: George Westinghouse, (r92 W568g), p. 73.
- Industries: Aluminum -- November 1888
- World's first production of commercial aluminum. Aluminum was
produced in commercial quantities on this date by the Pittsburgh
Reduction Company (which later developed into the
Aluminum Company of America). It was based upon the
invention of Charles Martin Hall (patented 2 April 1889).
- Sources: Greater Pittsburgh, November 1948, p. 21.
- The Pittsburgh Press, 5 October 1948.
- Sources: Greater Pittsburgh, November 1948, p. 21.
- Library, Carnegie: Allegheny -- 13 February 1890
- The Carnegie Library in Allegheny City, the first library given under
the Carnegie formula, was opened to the public after being dedicated by
President Benjamin Harrison. (Under the Carnegie formula, although Andrew
Carnegie gave the building, the city had to agree to maintain the library.
Design by Smithmeyer and Pelz, the Washington architectural firm that
designed the Library of Congress.
- Sources: Typo-graphic, January 1968;
- Files of the Pennsylvania Department.
- Sources: Typo-graphic, January 1968;
- Library, Carnegie: Braddock -- 30 March 1889
- The Carnegie Library of Braddock, the first Carnegie Library in
America, was dedicated. This was an endowed library. Carnegie
Free Library of Allegheny was the first library given
under the Carnegie formula, that is, Andrew Carnegie
gave the building on the condition that the city
maintain the library.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 31 March 1989.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 31 March 1989.
- Map, Road -- Spring 1914
- The first road map distributed by an oil company was a 1914 map of
Allegheny County by Gulf Oil Corporation. 10,000 distributed to
registered automobile owners at the suggestion of William Akin, an
advertising man who prepared it.
- Source: "Mileposts of Map Progress" by Bert O. Meadowcroft in Gulf Oil's Orange Disc.
- Motion Picture Theater -- 19 June 1905
- The first theater in the world devoted exclusively to the exhibition
of motion pictures was the "Nickelodeon," which was opened by Harry Davis
in an empty store at 433-435 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
It had 96 seats taken from Davis' theaters. Among the first films were
"Poor But Honest" and "The Baffled Burglar."
- Source: Allegheny County: A Sesquicentennial Review, (r974.885 K17).
- Petroleum Refining -- circa 1850s
- Samuel Kier experimented with the first known distilling process for
petroleum. On Seventh Avenue, just East of the old Pennsylvania Canal
near Grant Street, Kier established (1853 or 1854) the first successful
petroleum refinery in the Western hemisphere.
- Sources: The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, v. 42, p. 356;
- Pennsylvania Internal Affairs Bulletin, June 1965.
- Sources: The Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, v. 42, p. 356;
- Picturephone -- 30 June 1970
- At 9:40 a.m. Mayor Peter Flaherty made world's fist regular service
Picturephone call to John D. Harper of Alcoa.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 30 June 1970, p. 2.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 30 June 1970, p. 2.
- Polio Vaccine -- 26 March 1953
- Dr. Jonas E. Salk, a 38-year-old University of Pittsburgh researcher
and professor, reported success of a new polio vaccine
tried on human beings; the vaccine was developed by him
and his staff at Pitt.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 12 April 1955.
- Printing Press: Continuous Roll -- 14 April 1863
- This marked the date the patent was granted for the first printing
press to use a continuous web or roll of paper. This was the Bullock
Press, produced by William Bullock of Pittsburgh in 1865. It was the
first machine built especially for curved stereotype plates. It printed
both sides of the sheet and cut it either before or after printings (U.
S. patent #38,200.)
- Source: Famous First Facts, 483.
- Source: Famous First Facts, 483.
- Pull-Tab on Cans -- 1962
- Alcoa developed the pull-tab and Iron City Brewery was the first
cannery to market it (1962); the first in the world to
do so, for a long time, pull-tabs were used only in this
area.
- Sources: Iron City Brewery, 8 March 1995;
- Pennsylvania Department files: Pittsburgh. Industries. Brewing.
- Sources: Iron City Brewery, 8 March 1995;
- Radio Broadcast: Church Service -- 2 January 1921
- The first church service broadcast in the world originated in the
Calvary Protestant Episcopal Church (315 Shady Avenue, Pittsburgh) and
was transmitted through the facilities of KDKA Radio.
- Source: A Traveler's Guide to Historic Western Pennsylvania, p. 69.
- Radio Broadcast, Commercial: KDKA -- 2 November 1920
- "The world's first broadcast by a commercially licensed radio station
was the Harding-Cox presidential election returns of November 2, 1920, on
KDKA Radio, Pittsburgh. Thus, KDKA is the world's first commercial radio
station.
- Sources: Undercover Club Newsletter, August 1993, p. 4;
- A Traveler's Guide to Historic Western Pennsylvania, p. 71.
- Sources: Undercover Club Newsletter, August 1993, p. 4;
- Radio Broadcast: Phonograph Records -- 17 October 1919
- Broadcast of phonograph records on a regular schedule was begun by
Frank Conrad from a brick garage in the rear of his
house at 7750 Penn Avenue. (Licensed July 1916; canceled during World
War I.)
- Source: A Traveler's Guide to Historic Western Pennsylvania, p. 70.
- Roof, Retractable: Civic Arena -- 18 September 1961
- Pittsburgh's Civic Arena is the world's first auditorium with a
retractable roof. At the time, it was the world's largest opening
and closing roof--three times the size of St. Peter's dome, the Vatican.
- Source: Greater Pittsburgh, September 1961.
- Source: Greater Pittsburgh, September 1961.
- Sky Ballet -- 16-18 April 1970
- Otto Piene introduces sky ballet with balloons in downtown Pittsburgh.
- Source: Pennsylvania Department files.
- Sports: Baseball: World Series -- 13 October 1903
- The first of baseball's modern World Series ended before 7,455
persons at Boston. The Pittsburgh Pirates were defeated
by Boston 4 - 3 and lost the Series 3 games to five.
Games played in Pittsburgh on October 6, 7, 8 and 10.
- Sources: Pittsburgh Gazette, 14 October 1903;
- Official World Series Records from 1903-1975.
- Sources: Pittsburgh Gazette, 14 October 1903;
- Steamboat: "New Orleans" -- 20 October 1811
- The "New Orleans," the first steamboat to navigate the Western
waters, sailed for New Orleans. Didn't arrive at New Orleans until 10
January 1812. Began regular trips between Natchez and New Orleans on 23
January 1812. Launched 17 March 18ll.
- Sources: The Pittsburgh Press, 15 October 1961;
- The Pittsburgh Press, 29 June 1930.
- Sources: The Pittsburgh Press, 15 October 1961;
- Submarine, Atomic: Engine -- 21 January 1954
- The U.S.S. Nautilus, the first atomic submarine, which was powered by
an engine built by Westinghouse Electric Corporation, was launched at
Groton, Connecticut.
- Source: Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, 20 January 1954.
- Source: Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, 20 January 1954.
- Telephone: International Communications Center -- 28 November 1969
- Pittsburgh became the first inland center for overseas telephone calls.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 28 November 1969.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press, 28 November 1969.
- Television Station, Educational -- 1 April 1954
- WQED, operated by the Metropolitan Pittsburgh Educational Station,
went on the air. First community-sponsored educational television station
in America. In 1955 it was the first to telecast classes to
elementary schools.
- Sources: WQED;
- Guide to the State Historical Markers of Pennsylvania, 1991, p. 129;
- Pennsylvania Department files.
- Sources: WQED;
- Television Stations, Educational: Two -- 16 July 1958
- Pittsburgh was the first city to have two educational TV channels,
when a second channel, WQEX, was granted.
- Source: WQED-WQEX Public Relations Department.
- Transplants -- 3 December 1989
- First heart, liver and kidney transplant done in simultaneous
operations at Presbyterian-University Hospital.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press 4 December 1989, p. A1.
- Source: The Pittsburgh Press 4 December 1989, p. A1.
- Unions, Labor: American Federation of Labor -- 15-18 November 1881
- The American Federation of Labor (A. F. of L.) held its first
national convention at Pittsburgh.
- Source: Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, v. 6.
- University Skyscraper: Cathedral of Learning -- 21 September 1926
- Ground was broken for the University of Pittsburgh's Cathedral of
Learning, the first university skyscraper.
- Source: Pittsburgh Gazette Times, 22 September 1926.

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