Brookline Boulevard - The Commercial District

Picture of
 Brookline Boulevard, 1936.

Photo Links at bottom of page

It is hard to determine when exactly Brookline Boulevard was laid out. Pioneer Avenue was built in 1797 and it has to be assumed that Brookline Boulevard was in existence in some shape or form at that time, most likely a dirt road leading to the farms of East Brookline (then considered Overbrook) and the rail station at Rt. 51. (Saw Mill Run)

As development of the area began in earnest in the early 1900s, Brookline Boulevard began to take shape. A single-track streetcar line ran from West Liberty Avenue through to Edgebrook Avenue. Brookline Boulevard began at West Liberty and Bodkin Street. Bodkin was the lower part of the Boulevard, used for wagon and vehicular traffic. The streetcars used the Pittsburgh Railways right-of-way (the looping section of the boulevard as we know it today) exclusively.

Brookline Boulevard and West Liberty
Avenue in 1909 showing the original
path of the Boulevard running up
what is now Bodkin Street.

In 1910 the streetcar line was double-tracked and extended into East Brookline. The Boulevard was paved and the West Liberty Development Corporation turned Brookline from a rural farming community into a residential neighborhood. As the community grew and prospered, the Boulevard soon was in need of modernization. In 1935, traffic patterns were changed from Pioneer Avenue to West Liberty Avenue. The Bodkin portion of the roadway was blocked off and the roadway was switched onto the trolley right-ot-way, which was widened and paved for both vehicular and rail traffic.

Brookline Boulevard became the centerpiece of the community, a commercial district full of shops to cater to the needs of the developing neighborhood. As the community of Brookline grew, the Boulevard continue to evolve. In time the roadway was paved completely from West Liberty through to Edgebrook Avenue, leaving the lower portion as a two lane road seperated by the tracks. In 1966 the streetcar service was discontinued and the Boulevard was widened to four lanes all the way through to Breining Street.

The 39-Brookline trolley heads towards
the loop at the lower end of the Boulevard.
It has just passed Breining Street in the
background and is positioned at the bottom
of Birchland Street.

The seventies and eighties brought a bit of a recession as many steel jobs migrated to other parts of the country. Brookline's population began to decrease and there was a noticeable shift in the types of businesses located on the Boulevard.

Empty storefronts were a problem that threatened to undermine the community. Through the efforts of many concerned citizens and community groups, Brookline Boulevard survived the hard times and is well on the road to recovery. In fact, the boulevard is scheduled for a major reconstruction in the near future. The work is slated to begin sometime in late-2007.

For those of us who grew up in Brookline, the Boulevard has always been the center of activity here in the community, and will continue to be the hub around which Brookline revolves well into the 21st Century.

Below are links to photos of Brookline Boulevard, past and present. Enjoy the look back in time.

The Carnegie Library
The Brookline Monument
The 4th of July Parade
The Little League Parade

The Memorial Day Parade
The Halloween Parade
The Autumn Moon Festival
Trolley Service in Brookline

Brookline Boulevard at Pioneer Avenue
 and Bodkin Street during reconstruction in 1935

Brookline's First Plumber, 1905
View Towards Brookline Blvd, 1906
St. Mark Chapel, 1908 (2004)
Brookline Boulevard, 1909
Brookline Firehouse, 1911
Brookline Boulevard, 1911
Building the Trolley Line, 1915
Brookline Boulevard, 1912
Pioneer Avenue, 1915
Brookline Firehouse, 1920
Brookline Boulevard, 1920
Real Estate Brochures, 1924
Brookline Boulevard, 1924 (#1)
Brookline Boulevard, 1924 (#2)
Brookline Boulevard, 1924 (#3)
Brookline Boulevard, 1928
Brookline Boulevard, 1929
Brookline Boulevard, 1933 (#1)
Brookline Boulevard, 1933 (#2)
Boulevard Reconstruction, 1935 (#1)
Boulevard Reconstruction, 1935 (#2)
Brookline Boulevard, 1936 (#1)
Brookline Boulevard, 1936 (#2)
Angie's Barber Shop, 1937
The Original "Cannon", 1942
Brookline Boulevard, 1943
Women's Bowling League, 1944
Brookline Boulevard, 1948
The Blizzard of 1950

Brookline Boulevard, 1951
Brookline Firehouse, 1952
Brookline Savings and Trust, 1952
Presbyterian Church, 1953
Brookline Boulevard, 1956
Post Office Dedication, 1958
St. Mark Church, 1960
Park Side Grill, 1961
Brookline Boulevard, 1961
Brookline Boulevard, 1965
Brookline Firehouse, 1966
Brookline Boulevard, 1967
Fire on Brookline Boulevard, 1973
Brookline Boulevard, 1980
Building Brookline Terrace, 1981
New Highrise Apartments, 1981
Dedication - Brookline Terrace, 1982
Fire on Brookline Boulevard, 1985
Brookline Boulevard, The Breeze 1987
Brookline Boulevard, 1989
From Stop-N-Go to Co-Go
Remember Bryant's Hardware?
The Brookline Mural, 1997
Brookline Firehouse, 1998
Brookline Blvd/Pioneer Ave, 2000
Brookline Boulevard, 1999/2000
Carnegie Library Re-Opening, 2004
View Towards East Brookline, 2004

Brookline
 Boulevard near Glenarm Street during the Autumn Moon Festival - Sept 2000.

If you have any old photos of Brookline Boulevard that you would like to share with us and have presented here, please contact us through our guestbook located on the homepage.

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