Saturday

Directions to Gypsy

1330 Bingham Street,Pittsburgh, 15203Bingham Street runs parallel to East Carson Street, one block closer (North) to the Monongahela River. We are conveniently located two buildings East of City Theatre in South Side.

From the Birmingham Bridge (Oakland and City East): Bear Right onto East Carson Street and follow West through several lights to 13th Street (The Pickle Barrel; Dairy Queen). Turn Right onto 13th Street, then Right onto Bingham Street (City Theatre). Gypsy is located on the right hand side, directly across from the Schwartz Market/City Theatre parking lot, 1330 Bingham, at the corner of 14th Street.

From the West End, Station Square, and Smithfield Street Bridge (Downtown): Follow West Carson Street headed East, with Station Square and the Monongahela River on your left. Continue past the Smithfield Street Bridge, or turn Left onto East Carson from the Smithfield Street Bridge from Downtown Pittsburgh (the bridge is the division of West and East Carson St.)Follow East Carson Street to 13th Street (Dairy Queen on left). Turn Left onto 13th Street, then turn Right onto Bingham Street (City Theatre). Gypsy is located on the right hand side, directly across from the Schwartz Market/City Theatre parking lot, 1330 Bingham at the corner of 14th Street.

From Eastern Suburbs/I 376/Second Avenue and the 10th Street Bridge (Downtown): From 376 West headed toward Pittsburgh, take the Glenwood Exit (just past Oakland) and turn Right onto Second Avenue. Follow Second Avenue along the Monongahela River approximately 1.5 miles to the 10th Street Bridge/Armstrong Tunnel. Turn Left onto the 10th Street Bridge and get into the Left lane. Turn Left at the end of the bridge onto Muriel Street. Follow Muriel Street 3 blocks to 13th Street and turn Right. Turn Left onto Bingham Street (City Theatre). Gypsy is located on the right hand side, directly across from the Schwartz Market/City Theatre parking lot, 1330 Bingham at the corner of 14th Street.

From South Hills area: Approach the Liberty Tunnels and get into the Right Lane. Turn Right at the end of the tunnel, following signs to South Side. Cross at the light onto PJ McArdle Roadway and follow until it ends on 10th Street. Turn Left onto 10th Street and follow it to East Carson Street and turn Right. Turn Left onto 13th Street, then turn Right onto Bingham Street (City Theatre). Gypsy is located on the right hand side, directly across from the Schwartz Market/City Theatre parking lot, 1330 Bingham at the corner of 14th Street.
Gypsy Cafe -- 1330 Bingham Street, Southside, Pittsburgh PA 412.381.GYPSY (4977).

Friday

About us

We are Haunted Pittsburgh LLC, a group of Western Pennsylvania professionals whose interest in Pittsburgh's macabre, unexplained, ghostly, sometimes ghastly past led to years of research and studying in an effort to compile all the shocking tales from the French and Indian War through today.

For a fixed price, we serve up Pittsburgh’s most chilling ghost stories along with the best food in town -- a dinner that will delight your palate and stories that will tingle your spine. Please note that all cuisine is served with a generous helping of goose bumps.

We are launching a South Side ghost tour in the summer of 2009 -- details soon on this website.

We are constantly updating our research and welcome any and all leads you might have. Write to us here: hauntedpittsburgh@rocketmail.com

Thursday

The dagger at the center of one of Pittsburgh's greatest ghost stories

This dagger -- now on display at the Senator John Heinz History Center -- was at the center not only of one of Pittsburgh's greatest ghost stories but of the biggest news story in America at the time it was used to try to kill a powerful steel magnate.

On the afternoon of July 23, 1892, while the greatest steel strike in American history was raging against the Carnegie Steel Company, an anarchist named Alexander Berkman burst into the downtown office of the man who ran the company, Henry Clay Frick -- "the most hated man in America" -- and shot him twice in the neck and stabbed him four times with this dagger.

Frick survived the attack, and Berkman later claimed his bullets failed to hit Frick in the head because he was blinded by light coming through the office window. The only problem is, there was no light coming through the window. Mr. Frick, by any measure the most level-headed of businessman, knew the real reason he survived -- and it had to do with a ghost.

Join us and hear the whole story!

Monday

Clayton: The Frick House

"Clayton" is the name of the Italianate-style home located at the corner of Penn and South Homewood avenues in Pittsburgh’s residential East End neighborhood that is literally the last remnant of Pittsburgh's fabled millionaire's row. It was the home of Pittsburgh coke and steel magnate Henry Clay Frick and his family. Mr. Frick ran the world's largest steel company and was at the center of some of Pittsburgh's -- and the nation's -- greatest tragedies, including the Homestead Steel Strike and the Johnstown Flood.

The Frick family lived in Clayton from 1883 to 1905, and retained the house even after they moved to New York. In 1981, Mr. Frick's daughter Helen returned to live there in her old age. Before her death in 1984, she arranged for the home to become a living museum. It is now open the public and is among Pittsburgh's greatest treasures.

Clayton was witness to far more than it's share of sorrow, and there have been multiple reports of spiritual sightings there. Join us and hear about them.