History

Mt. Lebanon’s Class of ’62 and Class of ’13 exchange survey answers, life experiences and their version of The American Dream at the 50/50 event last week.

Our sort-of-sister-city is Shaker Heights, Ohio, a suburb on the East Side of Cleveland. If you’ve never been there before, you could find yourself in a very familiar environment.

Mt. Lebanon’s houses of worship are architectural marvels and historic markers.

Mt. Lebanon’s history is enriched by the sacrifice and bravery of our veterans, and their journeys are not forgotten.

Share your family story in a video to celebrate Mt. Lebanon’s Centennial.

Although the roots of Mt. Lebanon schools reach to the late 1790s, when children studied at tree trunk tables in a one-room log cabin in what is now Upper St. Clair, the school district was not born until 1912.

An abridged Chapter 3 of our 2000 book on Mt. Lebanon history, “The Way We Were.” Part of a yearlong series.

South Hills Interfaith Ministries will host the 33rd annual Holocaust observance on Sunday, April 29 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Temple Emanuel of the South Hills, Bower Hill Road.

Mt. Lebanon’s founding families began arriving in the late 1700s on foot, on horseback and in wagons. They suffered the new republic’s growing pains, some seeing action in the French and Indian War, the Revolutionary War and Whiskey Rebellion skirmishes.