The Espy Post and First Bull Run, 160 years later

Later this month — July 21, to be exact — we will mark the 160th anniversary of the first major land battle of the Civil War at Bull Run. It was on the fields around Manassas, Va., only 25 miles from Washington, D.C., that some 60,000 Union and Confederate soldiers met in vicious, sometimes hand-to-hand Read More

Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall celebrates 120 years

Written by Maggie Forbes As anyone who reads the Library & Music Hall’s newsletters, eblasts or my columns in this newspaper knows, I love milestones. I learned last week that the Library & Music Hall will be celebrating its Quasquicentennial (125) as the country celebrates its Semiquincentennial (250) in 2026. Just imagine the programs and Read More

Completing the Carnegie Carnegie Challenge!

Written by Maggie Forbes At the sold-out and terrific Pete & Scott & Benny & Joe concert on May 5th, we announced that the Andrew Carnegie Free Library & Music Hall had received a $50,000 challenge grant.  Very generous friends of the Library & Music Hall, who wish to remain anonymous, gave a huge boost to getting Read More

National Poetry Month

National Poetry Month Check out our month-long celebration of National Poetry month! With readings, workshops, and competitions, there are so many ways to enjoy and appreciate poetry! These events are made possible through the generous partnership of the following: Modern Mercantile More Than Words Red Brick Poetry Pittsburgh Poetry Collective

New Espy Post curator looks to build on past

“A capacity, and taste, for reading, gives access to whatever has already been discovered by others. It is the key, or one of the keys, to the already solved problems. And not only so. It gives relish, and facility, for successfully pursuing the [yet] unsolved ones.” — Abraham Lincoln I thought this quote from Abraham Read More

Carnegie Carnegie Corner: Remembering veterans of long ago

Written by Tribune-Review For Union Civil War veterans, April 1865 started a time of healing and renewal. We often forget that there were no social safety nets for these men who so nobly served the call to arms to defend the Union. Not until 1930 was there a Veterans Administration as we know it today. Read More