Pittsburg, PA
2 Negro League baseball stars lying in unmarked graves honored with new headstones
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – On Monday, a Rome Monuments crew installed two grave markers in Pittsburgh’s Highwood Cemetery.
The two makers were dedicated to Clarence “Win” Harris and Frank Miller, two Negro League baseball stars, who, up until this point, were lying at rest in unmarked graves.
It is not exactly known why Harris and Miller, with some 20 other Negro League players, were laid to rest without headstones, but Sean Gibson, the great-grandson of Negro Leagues legend Josh Gibson and the Executive Director of the Josh Gibson Foundation, says this initiative is about keeping these players’ memories alive.
“I know today, Frank Miller is definitely resting in peace,” said Gibson. “Now, somebody can come by and see Frank Miller, and that was the whole purpose of the QR code, is that these graves have been unmarked for so long, and if someone comes by, we want the people to know who these people are. The main goal was that we want to give all these players that we know of, a final resting place, and be finally resting in peace. And now, Frank Miller and Clarence Harris are finally resting in peace.”
Each marker costs about $1,000 to install, and while the Josh Gibson Foundation is grateful for every donation it receives, the organization was specifically honored when it got a group of middle school students who contributed and were eager to preserve the past.
Such is the story of the seventh-grade students at Ryan Gloyer Middle School, who raised over $800 for Clarence Harris’ marker. Three students, Karen Jiang, Fay Baden and Vanessa Simon, were on hand at Highwood Cemetery to see the marker installed.
“We made some posters to raise some more awareness,” said Baden. “We sat outside at lunch and made some announcements at lunch, letting everyone know that they could donate.”
“It just touches the bottom of my heart to know that our work that we put into this, and the resources we had, could actually do something so great,” Simon said.
The Negro Leagues Memorial Marker Initiative has nine more graves to mark and preserve in Western Pennsylvania, and the hope is that this project could not just spread across the state in the future, but across the county, to allow all these Negro League stars to once again come home.
More information on this project and ways to donate to this initiative can be found here.
Pittsburg, PA
Man’s body found underneath trailer behind former Shop ‘n Save in Carrick
Pittsburgh Police detectives are investigating after a man’s body was found underneath a trailer behind the former Shop ‘n Save store in the city’s Carrick neighborhood.
Pittsburgh Public Safety said late Monday night that detectives from the Violent Crime division responded to the area of Amanda Street and Wynoka Street in Carrick after a man’s body was found around 8:30 p.m.
Public Safety said the man’s body was found underneath a trailer and that he was pronounced dead by medics at the scene.
A photo provided by Pittsburgh Public Safety shows officers surrounding a taped off area and what appears to be a refrigerated trailer parked at the loading dock along Amanda Street behind the former Brownsville Shop n’ Save, which closed its doors last month.
No details surrounding the circumstances of the man’s death were provided by Public Safety, who said that the cause and the manner of the man’s death will be determined by the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office.
The man’s identity has not been released.
Public Safety said the investigation into the man’s death is “ongoing.”
Pittsburg, PA
Record number of peregrine falcons counted in Allegheny County
In the early 1960s, the peregrine falcon population declined so sharply that the raptors weren’t even nesting in Pennsylvania. But now, the National Aviary says a record number have been counted in Allegheny County.
The National Aviary says six peregrine falcons were recorded in the county during the annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count. The nation’s longest-running citizen science project collects data on bird populations for ornithologists, the aviary says. It also plays a role in guiding conservation action, like what was needed to bring peregrine falcons back from the brink of extinction.
Because of the use of DDT, peregrine falcons were no longer nesting in the state of Pennsylvania by the early 1960s, the aviary said. But after the harmful pesticide, which negatively affects reproduction rates in birds, was banned in 1972, conservation efforts have helped the peregrine falcon rebound. It was removed from the federal endangered species list in 1999 and Pennsylvania’s list in 2021.
The record number of peregrine falcons in Allegheny County is thanks in part to the nest on top of Pitt’s Cathedral of Learning in Oakland. For the past two years, biologists with the Pennsylvania Game Commission have banded chicks born in the nest. Three were banded last year, and two the year before that.
People can watch Carla and Ecco raise their family in the nest on a livestream camera run by the National Aviary. Carla laid her first egg of the breeding season on March 16 last year, so the aviary says the start of another season isn’t too far away.
Pittsburg, PA
Police investigating two late-night McKeesport shootings
Police are investigating two shootings that happened less than 30 minutes apart on Sunday night in McKeesport.
Two men were injured in the shootings that happened at two different locations.
Allegheny County Police said that the department’s Homicide Unit was requested and responded to assist in the shooting investigations.
According to police, officers were first called to the area of Lysle Boulevard and Huey Street, where a man was shot just after 10:30 p.m. on Sunday night.
KDKA’s news crew at the scene saw the outside of the Sunoco gas station along Lysle Boulevard lined with crime tape and what appeared to be blood on the front door of the store.
Police also had an area taped off around the intersection of nearby 5th Avenue and Huey Street. The man who was shot in the area was taken to the hospital in stable condition.
Police said they are also investigating a shooting that happened in the area of an alleyway behind Madison Avenue, where another man was shot Dispatchers said the second shooting happened around 25 minutes after the first.
The two shooting scenes in McKeesport are located around 1/4 of a mile apart.
At the second shooting scene, KDKA’s news crew at the scene saw police taping off an alleyway between Madison Avenue and Petty Street.
Officers at the scene were shining flashlights and looking into a black sedan that had its flashers on. The man who was shot in the area of Madison Avenue was taken to the hospital in stable condition.
Police didn’t specify if the two shootings are believed to be related.
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