{"id":65,"featured":0,"modified":"2025-05-31 23:58:12","latitude":40.44703840233546,"longitude":-79.9678784608841,"title":"Centre Avenue YMCA","address":"","thumbnail":"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/square_thumbnails\/83b1fa84fb4f1e7d842ff960c6bce244.jpg","creator":["Brandon Self and Andrew Ciavarino"],"description":"<p>Throughout its history, the Young Men\u2019s Christian Association (YMCA) has had a focus of providing quality support to working class men survive the harsh conditions that they were facing. When it was founded in 1851, the YMCA had strong goals to bring support and services to the working class. Unfortunately, the services and lodgings that were offered by the YMCA were heavily segregated. When William Hunton became the first black full time secretary of the YMCA in 1888, he faced the challenges of establishing a place for African Americans under the YMCA\u2019s segregated policies. This led to the birth of a movement that focused on creating \u201csemi-autonomous African American YMCA system,\u201d that no longer focused on the \u201cseemingly futile goals of participation with whites, and instead advocated self-help and racial solidarity.\u201d YMCAs built under this philosophy were to serve as pillars in African American communities and would\u00a0 \u201cShield black men from the humiliations of lingering racism and segregationist policies.\u201d This required Hunton and others to fundraise and attract benefactors willing to offer aid to those communities seeking to build their YMCA. After a lengthy process of successfully fundraising the required funds to purchase a site and having the structure built, the Pittsburgh\u2019s African American YMCA affiliate officially joined this legacy as the Centre Avenue YMCA in 1923.<\/p>\r\nThe Centre Avenue YMCA, located on the corner of Francis Street and Centre Avenue, served as a cultural and institutional beacon of the Hill District, offering many amenities such as a swimming pool, gym, boxing ring, and community center. \u00a0The YMCA also provided lodging. These lodgings were often used by black athletes who could not stay at the white only hotels. Among its 86 rooms, many famous figures have claimed residency at some point or another such as baseball hero Jackie Robinson, jazz legend Dizzy Gillespie, and champion-boxer Joe Louis. The Historic YMCA also hosted several speeches and lectures from prominent African Americans such as W.E.B DuBois, Langston Hughes, and Paul Robeson. Even famous Pittsburgh playwright, August Wilson used the Y\u2019s meeting spaces earlier in his career to meet with his group the Centre Avenue Poets, which included fellow writers Charlie Williams and Rob Penny. The YMCA offered many great programs for community members. One such program provided college scholarships to local students, on the basis that they would return and work and work at the YMCA in some capacity after graduation.<br \/>\r\n<h3><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">A Slow Decline<\/span><\/h3>\r\n<p>Regardless of the opportunities and services the Central Avenue YMCA provided the residents of the Hill District, membership began to steadily decline in the late 1950s. The changes began with the Urban Renewal projects in the Lower Hill, forcing many members to relocate. As the \u201cseparate but equal\u201d doctrine in the YMCA\u2019s policy on membership and attendance dissipated due to the success of the Civil Rights movement, many middle class African Americans chose membership at the better funded YMCAs that had once been segregated. The later collapse of the steel industry in the 1970s and 80s meant more people could not afford to use the Y\u2019s services. This turmoil would cause an upsurge in substance abuse and criminal activity in the late 80s and early 90s for the Hill. The Central Avenue YMCA provided a place for transitional housing and provided support services for people fighting substance abuse and mental illness, causing a shift from recreational and community activities to community services. However it was designated a City Historic Infrastructure in 1995.<\/p>\r\n<h3><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Rebuilding<\/span><\/h3>\r\n<p>Later, in 2012, a new YMCA was built on Central Ave and named after Thelma Lovette. Lovette was a prominent activist in Pittsburgh who heavily involved herself with the local YMCA as the first woman on the Central Ave Board. As of today, the Centre Avenue YMCA no longer functions in the same capacity as it once did.\u00a0 This does not mean that it has lost all of its original principles.\u00a0 In 2020, it was announced that a partnership between the YMCA and ACTION Housing, with help from $7.4 million provided by over 20 agencies, would transform the Historic Centre Avenue building into a low-income residency for African American men. This renovation allowed the building to continue its mission of being a safe refuge to African American men who require the safety of its walls.\u00a0<a href=\"#_ftnref6\" name=\"_ftn6\"><\/a><\/p>\r\n<p><\/p>\r\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref10\" name=\"_ftn10\"><\/a><\/p>\r\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref12\" name=\"_ftn12\"><\/a><\/p>","sponsor":"","subtitle":"A beacon of progress in the Hill District","accessinfo":"","lede":"","website":"","related_resources":["<p>Bamberg, Angelique. \u201cNational Register of Historic Places Registration Form for Central Avenue YMCA.\u201d United States Department of the Interior. National Park Service\/ National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, September 29, 2020. https:\/\/apps.pittsburghpa.gov\/redtail\/images\/12823_Centre_Avenue_YMCA.pdf.<\/p>\r\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>Mjagkij, Nina. \u201cLight in the Darkness.\u201d In <em>Light in the Darkness: African Americans and the YMCA, 1852-1946<\/em>, 17\u201338. Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky Press, 1994. Quoted in Bamberg, Angelique. \u201cNational Register of Historic Places Registration Form for Central Avenue YMCA.\u201d United States Department of the Interior. National Park Service\/ National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, September 29, 2020.<\/p>\r\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>Redwood, Carl Jr. Interview with Carl Redwood Jr. by Author. Interview by Author. Phone, September 23, 2023.<\/p>\r\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>Solomon, Jenna. \u201cCentre Avenue YMCA.\u201d Magazine. Pennsylvania Heritage Magazine, Summer 2022. https:\/\/paheritage.wpengine.com\/article\/centre-avenue-ymca\/.<\/p>\r\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>Taylor, Rob Jr. \u201cA Prominent Place in the Hill District\u2019s Future.\u201d <em>New Pittsburgh Courier<\/em>, March 4, 2020, sec. Metro. Gale: OneFile: News.<\/p>\r\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>Rosenfeld, Jordana. 2024. \u201cHill District Thelma Lovette YMCA Celebrates Turning 10 With Rooftop Party, Open House.\u201d <em>Pittsburgh City Paper<\/em>, April 29, 2022. <a href=\"https:\/\/www.pghcitypaper.com\/news\/hill-district-thelma-lovette-ymca-celebrates-turning-10-with-rooftop-party-open-house-21508043#:~:text=In%202012%2C%20the%20Thelma%20Lovette,before%20her%20passing%20in%202014\">https:\/\/www.pghcitypaper.com\/news\/hill-district-thelma-lovette-ymca-celebrates-turning-10-with-rooftop-party-open-house-21508043#:~:text=In%202012%2C%20the%20Thelma%20Lovette,before%20her%20passing%20in%202014<\/a>.<\/p>\r\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\r\n<p>Sewald, Jeff. 2019. \u201cThelma Williams Lovette, Social Worker and Community Leader - Pittsburgh Quarterly.\u201d Pittsburgh Quarterly. November 21, 2019. https:\/\/pittsburghquarterly.com\/articles\/thelma-williams-lovette\/.<\/p>"],"files":{"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/fullsize\/83b1fa84fb4f1e7d842ff960c6bce244.jpg":{"id":172,"mime-type":"image\/png","title":"Centre Avenue Y.M.C.A.","thumbnail":"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/square_thumbnails\/83b1fa84fb4f1e7d842ff960c6bce244.jpg","description":"The Y.M.C.A. on Centre Avenue was built in 1922 as the first Y.M.C.A. for African Americans in Pittsburgh. It was founded in 1883 and was officially chartered in 1910. Many Urban League activities were held here. The YMCA closed its operations in the facility in the late 2000s. ACTION- Housing opened Centre Avenue Housing in 2021 after extensive restoration and renovation was completed and can be home to 74 residents. | Urban League of Pittsburgh Records, 1915-1963 | Urban League of Pittsburgh"},"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/fullsize\/4f954d7ab3b4c61a932af136b12dc450.jpg":{"id":173,"mime-type":"image\/png","title":"Political rally at the Hill District YMCA","thumbnail":"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/square_thumbnails\/4f954d7ab3b4c61a932af136b12dc450.jpg","description":"A view of the inauguration of the Hill District YMCA on Centre Avenue. | Dorsey-Turfley Family Photographs, 1880-1987 (Bulk 1900-1950), MSP 455, Library &amp; Archives, Senator John Heinz History Center | Unknown"},"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/fullsize\/ad819a00fba13db7e70c2f1562dc4070.jpg":{"id":174,"mime-type":"image\/png","title":"Lunch counter at the Centre Avenue YMCA, with Courier photographer Walter Allen seated","thumbnail":"https:\/\/hillhistory.org\/files\/square_thumbnails\/ad819a00fba13db7e70c2f1562dc4070.jpg","description":"The Centre Avenue YMCA is located at Centre and Francis Street in the Hill District. A waitress brings a glass of water to one of the patrons at the lunch counter. Men, women and a small boy are present. Two women watch the scene through a narrow window in the back wall. Walter Allen, possibly the man at left reading a paper, had begun working for the Pittsburgh Courier as a clerk by 1941. However, style of dress and decor suggest a date in the 1950s. | <br \/>\r\nTeenie Harris Photograph Collection, 1920-1970 | Harris, Charles Teenie"}}}