Carnegie Library of Homestead
The Carnegie Library of Homestead is a public library founded by Andrew Carnegie in 1898.
Carnegie Library of Homestead
Main Entrance Staircase of the Library
Library in 1900
Delivery room
Homestead Steel Works was a large steel works located on the Monongahela River at Homestead, Pennsylvania in the United States. The company developed in the nineteenth century as an extensive plant served by tributary coal and iron fields, a railway 425 miles (684 km) long, and a line of lake steamships. The works was also the site of one of the more serious labor disputes in U.S. history, which became known as the Homestead strike of 1892.
Steel workers gaze on as molten steel is poured from ladle to casts at Homestead Steel Works.
The water tower of the pumphouse is one of the few structures remaining from the 1800s. Now, it provides restrooms within for visitors and cyclists traveling on the Great Allegheny Passage trail.
Barge and The Waterfront shopping center
Carrie Furnace, a blast furnace across the Monongahela River from the main site