Brownsville is a borough in
Fayette County,
Pennsylvania,
United States, 35 miles (56 km) south of
Pittsburgh along the
Monongahela River. In 1940, 8,015 people lived here. The population was 2,804 at the
2000 census.
Geography
Brownsville is located at (40.020026, -79.889536) situated on the east (convex) side of a broad sweeping westward bend in the northerly flowing
Monongahela River at the westernmost point of Fayette County. Erosion undercutting action by the river on the surrounding characteristically steep-sided sandstone hills has created several shelf-like benches and connecting sloped terrain and thereby given the town lowland areas adjacent to or otherwise accessible to the river shores. Much of the town's residential buildings are built above the elevation of the business district arrayed upslope to either side along the connecting slopes and shelves cut by the geological action of long ago when the river bed moved gradually westward leaving the lowered shelves and slopes behind.
Concurrently, the opposite river shore of
Washington County is uncharacteristically for the region shaped even lower to the water surface and is generally flatter an plainlike than the more diverse geology of the towns lands. That shore holds a tightly bound mirror community of about a fifth the size, a small hamlet called
West Brownsville, Pennsylvania. Historically the low height of the concave shore of the river have made the river banks at the locii of two towns attractive as a natural river crossing, ferry, bridge, and boat building site. When the nascent United States government first appropriated funds for its first ever road building project, Brownsville, was an early intermediate target destination along the new
National Road. Until a bridge was built, it was the western terminus.
According to the
United States Census Bureau, the borough has a total area of 1.1 square miles (2.9 km²), of which, 1.0 square miles (2.6 km²) of it is land and 0.1 square miles (0.3 km²) of it (9.91%) is water. Lew Hosler was elected mayor in 2007.
Geographic factors impacting history
Redstone Creek is the name of a minor local tributary stream of the
Monongahela River in the area, and was said to have taken its color from the ferrous sandstone that lined its bed, as well as that of the sandstone heights near the Old Forts of an indigenous Amerindian culture. "Old Forts" were colonial era names given to mounds and earthworks created by the early (possibly ca. 3000 BC) Native American
Mound Builders Culture by early explorers and pioneers in those early days of the scientific revolution antedating the
anthropologists,
sociologists, and
archeologists professions.
Geographically, in the 1750s the area thus known as "
Redstone Old Forts" was strategically situated at the end of a natural navigable path down the extensive heavily forested western slopes of the
Western Allegheny ridgeline and its western foothills (given distance by modern roads, as approximated from the vicinity not far west of the summit near
Fort Necessity)which
George Washington had been using as a staging area while conducting road improvements to establish a fort at Brownsville/Redstone Old Forts. Geographically, the site has another virtue important in undeveloped timesthe northwards traveling
Monongahela river makes a broad sweep curving east to west in which the river undercuts and knocks down the high bluffs characteristically lining and surrounding the riverbed; at Brownsville, this created a terrain shelf down near the water, allowing settlers or military units to reach the water as well as a broad slow moving shallows along the curve which was shallow enough to pole across using a
poleboat or scratch-built timber
raft.
History
Brownsville began as
Redstone Old Fort and later in the
1760s70s eventually became known as
Redstone Fort or
Fort Burd named eponymously after the officer commanding it's establishment in 1759
[name="FortBurd">]. The fort was constructed on the bluff above the river on what may have been an fortification or burial ground of native peoples
[ name="BVilleHistSociety">] during the
French and Indian War, and which stockade was later occupied and garrisoned by a force from the
Colony of Virginia during the
1774 Indian war known as
Lord Dunmore's War, as it was situated at the important strategic end of
Nemacolin's Trail, the western part to the summitwhich when improved, later became known as
'Burd's Road'.
A forward thinking entrepreneur named Thomas Brown acquired the lands in what became Fayette County around the end of the American Revolution.
[name="Brown-keel-boat"]
> He realized the Opening of the Cumberland Gap and wars end made the land at the western tip of Fayette County a natural springboard to settle points west such as Ohio, Tennessee, and the in-fashion destination of the day,
Kentuckyall reachable via the
Ohio River and its tributary the Monongahela. The sparse primitive settlement at the time around the fort was mostly called Redstone, but eventually became known as Brownsville, as the land became owned by Thomas Brown by the 1780s when Jacob Bowman bought the land on which
Nemacolin Castle was constructed, beginning his trading post and a business expansion of settler services providers as foreseen by Thomas Brown. Since Redstone had been a frequent point of embarkation for travelers who were heading west via the Monongahela and
Ohio Rivers it became a natural center for the construction of many
keel-boatseven those heading for the far west via the
Santa Fe Trail or
Oregon Trail as floating on a
poleboat even against hundreds of miles of river current was usually safer, easier and far faster than overland travel. The major attraction of these early settlers to Brownsville was twofold. One, Brownsville was positioned at the western end of the National Pike,
U.S. Route 40. The other was the easy access to the Monongahela River where a vast flatboat building industry that later evolved into the largest steamboat industry developed during the 19th century. This access to the river provide a "jumping off" point for settlers headed into the western frontier. The Monongahela converges with the Ohio River at Pittsburgh and allowed for quick traveling to the western frontier.
Redstone Old Fort is mentioned in C. M. Ewing's
The Causes of that so called Whiskey Insurrection of 1794 (1930) as being the site of a July 27, 1791, meeting in "Opposition to the Whiskey Excise Tax," during the
Whiskey Rebellion, the first illegal meeting of that insurrection.
Demographics
As of the
census of 2000, there were 2,804 people, 1,238 households, and 716 families residing in the borough. The
population density was 2,796.6 people per square mile (1,082.6/km²). There were 1,550 housing units at an average density of 1,545.9/sq mi (598.5/km²). The racial makeup of the borough was 85.95%
White, 11.41%
African American, 0.11%
Native American, 0.07%
Asian, 0.21% from
other races, and 2.25% from two or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 0.82% of the population.
There were 1,238 households out of which 24.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 36.2% were
married couples living together, 17.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 42.1% were non-families. 38.0% of all households were made up of individuals and 20.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.24 and the average family size was 2.97.
In the borough the population was spread out with 23.2% under the age of 18, 9.0% from 18 to 24, 25.6% from 25 to 44, 21.1% from 45 to 64, and 21.1% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females there were 83.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 77.7 males.
The median income for a household in the borough was $18,559, and the median income for a family was $32,662. Males had a median income of $31,591 versus $21,830 for females. The
per capita income for the borough was $13,404. About 28.8% of families and 34.3% of the population were below the
poverty line, including 51.2% of those under age 18 and 17.9% of those age 65 or over.
Features
Dunlap's Creek Bridge (1839), carrying old
U.S. Route 40 over
Dunlap Creek in Brownsville, may be the nation's oldest dateable
cast iron bridge. (Capt.
Richard Delafield, engineer; John Snowden and John Herbertson, foundrymen)
Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) .
Flatiron Building (c. 1830), built as a commercial building in once thriving 19th century Brownsville, is one of the oldest, most intact commercial structures west of the Allegheny mountains. Over its history it's housed private commercial entities as well as public such as a post office. It's the unofficial "prototype" for the flatiron buildings we see across America today. The most notable being the Fuller Building in Market Square in New York City. After nearly being demolished, the saved the Flatiron Building. Throughout two decades, via private and public grants, the Flatiron building has been restored to once again be an historic asset to Brownsville. The Flatiron Building Heritage Center, also located within the Flatiron Building at 69 Market Street, currently houses artifacts from Brownsville's heydey as well as displays teaching visitors about the importance of coal & coke heritage. The Fran{k L. Melega Art Museum, located with the Heritage Center, displays many of this local southwestern Pennsylvanian's famous artwork, depicting the coal & coke era in the surrounding tri-state region.
Brownsville is also home to
Bowman's castle (Nemacolin Castle), the Philander Knox House, and the
Brashear House.
Notable residents
- John Brashear (1840-1920) - astronomer and builder of scientific instruments.
- Daniel French (1770-1853) - pioneering designer and builder of steam engines.
The
Brownsville Area School District serves Brownsville as well as several nearby communities. Schools within the district are:
- Brownsville Area High School (9-12)
- Brownsville Area Middle School (6-8)
- Cardale Elementary School (K-5)
- Central Elementary School (K-5)
- Cox-Donahey Elementary School (K-5)
Images