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单词 pittsburgh
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Pittsburgh


Pitts·burgh

P0337900 (pĭts′bûrg′) A city of southwest Pennsylvania at the point where the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers forms the Ohio River. Fort Duquesne was built on the site by the French c. 1750 and fell to the British in 1758, when it was renamed Fort Pitt. The village surrounding the fort grew rapidly after the opening of the Northwest Territory. The city today is highly industrialized.

Pittsburgh

(ˈpɪtsbɜːɡ) n (Placename) a port in SW Pennsylvania, at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers, which form the Ohio River: settled around Fort Pitt in 1758; developed rapidly with the discovery of iron deposits and one of the world's richest coalfields; the largest river port in the US and an important industrial centre, formerly with large steel mills. Pop: 325 337 (2003 est)

Pitts•burgh

(ˈpɪts bɜrg)

n. a port in SW Pennsylvania, at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers that forms the Ohio River. 350,363.
Thesaurus
Noun1.Pittsburgh - a city in southwestern Pennsylvania where the confluence of the Allegheny River and Monongahela River forms the Ohio RiverPittsburgh - a city in southwestern Pennsylvania where the confluence of the Allegheny River and Monongahela River forms the Ohio River; long an important urban industrial area; site of Carnegie Mellon University and the University of PittsburghCarnegie Mellon University - an engineering university in PittsburghUniversity of Pittsburgh - a university in Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaKeystone State, Pennsylvania, PA - a Mid-Atlantic state; one of the original 13 colonies

Pittsburgh


Pittsburgh

(pĭts`bərg), city (1990 pop. 369,879), seat of Allegheny co., SW Pa., at the confluence of the Allegheny and the Monongahela rivers, which there form the Ohio River; inc. 1816. A major inland port of entry, it is located at the junction of east-west transportation arteries.

Economy

Pittsburgh's access to large reserves of raw materials, especially coal, was instrumental to the emergence of the "Steel City" as a leading industrial center in the late 19th cent. Industries include transportation equipment; metal, wood, plastic, paper, and glass products; printing and publishing; oil refining; textiles; chemicals; and computers. After the mid-1970s, as the number of those employed in the steel industry declined, the city's economic base underwent a dramatic shift from manufacturing to service industries and commercial enterprises. Once a major center for corporate headquarters, many departed in the 1990s, a period, however, that saw the growth of high-technology companies.

History

The city was founded on the site of the Native American town of Shannopin, a late-17th-century fur-trading post at the junction of many canoe routes and trails. Fort DuquesneFort Duquesne
, at the junction of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, on the site of Pittsburgh, SW Pa. Because of its strategic location, it was a major objective in the last of the French and Indian Wars.
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, built by the French in the middle of the 18th cent., later fell to the English and was renamed Fort Pitt. The village surrounding the fort was settled in 1760, and it prospered with the opening of the Northwest TerritoryNorthwest Territory,
first possession of the United States, comprising the region known as the Old Northwest, S and W of the Great Lakes, NW of the Ohio River, and E of the Mississippi River, including the present states of Ohio, Ind., Ill., Mich., Wis., and part of Minn.
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. At the height of industrial development in the late 19th cent., Pittsburgh was a hotbed of labor unrest and union movements. The "Steel City" was once also called the "Smoky City" because of severe pollution; the problem, however, gradually abated by the late 1970s as industrial production fell. Sprawled over a hilly area, Pittsburgh has become an attractive city, but the loss of steel industry jobs has also led to a population decline. The business district was refurbished and marked by a construction boom that began in the 1980s.

Points of Interest

The downtown area, known as the Golden Triangle, includes Gateway Center, a landscaped hub of office and hotel space. Pittsburgh is the seat of Carlow Univ., Carnegie-Mellon Univ., Chatham Univ, Duquesne Univ., and the Univ. of Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, the Heinz Hall for the Performing Arts and neighboring theaters, the Carnegie Institute's art and natural history museums, the Carnegie Library, the Andy Warhol Museum, and the Senator John Heinz History Center are noteworthy. On the Univ. of Pittsburgh campus is a memorial hall dedicated to Stephen FosterFoster, Stephen Collins,
1826–64, American songwriter and composer, b. Lawrenceville, Pa. His pioneer family was aware of his talent for music, but not understanding it they provided him with little formal musical education.
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, who was born (1826) in Lawrenceville, now part of the city.

Pittsburgh has a fine park system, of which Schenley Park is the principal unit. The blockhouse of old Fort Pitt is preserved in Point State Park. Two botanical conservatories, the Buhl Science Center, a planetarium, a civic arena (with a retractable dome), an aviary, the Flag Plaza, and the Pittsburgh Zoo are among the city's other features. Pittsburgh is home to the Pirates (National League baseball), Steelers (National Football League), and Penguins (National Hockey League). A casino opened in the city in 2009.

Bibliography

See R. Lubove, Twentieth Century Pittsburgh (1969); J. D. Van Trump, Life and Architecture in Pittsburgh (1985).

Pittsburgh

 

a city in the northeastern USA, in Pennsylvania. Port at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers, which form the Ohio River. Population, 520,000 (1970; 2,400,000 including suburbs).

Pittsburgh is one of the largest industrial centers in the USA, with 31 percent of the working population employed in industry. In 1971 manufacturing industries employed 261,000 people in the city and its suburbs, and coal mining employed 9,000. Heavy industry predominates, employing more than two-thirds of the working population. The chief branch is ferrous metallurgy. Diverse forms of metalworking are connected with it, as is the production of coke, refractory materials, and construction materials. Other industries include the manufacture of heavy and transport machinery, industrial and road-building machines, and electrical and radioelectronic equipment. The city also has chemical enterprises, factories for the production of glass and ceramics, and food-processing plants. Coal is mined nearby. Pittsburgh is an important commercial center and transportation junction on the routes from the Atlantic coast to the central regions of the US. The city has three universities and the Carnegie Institute of Technology (since 1967 part of Carnegie-Mellon University). Other important cultural institutions are the Carnegie Institute Museum of Art and the Buhl Planetarium. Pittsburgh was founded in the mid-18th century.

Pittsburgh

a port in SW Pennsylvania, at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers, which form the Ohio River: settled around Fort Pitt in 1758; developed rapidly with the discovery of iron deposits and one of the world's richest coalfields; the largest river port in the US and an important industrial centre, formerly with large steel mills. Pop.: 325 337 (2003 est.)
AcronymsSeePGH

Pittsburgh


Related to Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh University
  • noun

Words related to Pittsburgh

noun a city in southwestern Pennsylvania where the confluence of the Allegheny River and Monongahela River forms the Ohio River

Related Words

  • Carnegie Mellon University
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • Keystone State
  • Pennsylvania
  • PA
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