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East Hills is a neighborhood in the east side of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. Its ZIP Code is 15221. It has representation on Pittsburgh City Council by the council member for District 9 (north north-east neighborhoods).
East Hills Shopping Center was an outdoor shopping mall in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Opened in 1960, the center lost most of its major stores in the late 1970s and underwent several failed attempts at renovation.
Allentown, Birmingham, East Birmingham, Monongahela, Mount Washington, Ormsby, South Pittsburgh, St. Clair, Temperanceville, Union and West Pittsburgh in 1872; Garfield in 1881; Brushton in 1894; Beltzhoover in 1898; Esplen and Sterrett Twp. in 1906; Allegheny in 1907, including formerly-annexed Manchester (1867) and Duquesne (part, 1868)
Penn Hills is a township with home rule status in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 41,059 as of the 2020 census. [ 3 ] A suburb of Pittsburgh , Penn Hills is the second-largest municipality in Allegheny County.
East Hills (Idaho), a small mountain range that is a subrange of the Albion Mountains East Hills, New York , a village in Nassau County East Hills (Pittsburgh) , Pennsylvania, the easternmost neighborhood in the city of Pittsburgh
East Pittsburgh is a borough in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States, approximately 11 miles (18 km) southeast of the confluence of the Monongahela and the Allegheny rivers at Pittsburgh. The population in 1900 stood at 2,883, and in 1910, at 5,615. As of the 2020 census, the borough population was 1,927, [4] having fallen from 6,079 ...
In 1828, the borough of Allegheny, Pennsylvania, was incorporated where the North Side now stands. It had a population of 1,000. In 1880, Allegheny was incorporated as a city. The City of Allegheny was annexed by Pittsburgh in 1907, and became known as the North Side.
The region is a large broad ridge with a steep ascent from east to west and rolling hills away from the ridge. The Allegheny Front reaches its highest elevation in Pennsylvania at Blue Knob, 3,136 feet (956 m), an unusual bulge along this symmetrical ridgeline. Streams that cut into the ridge are often shallow and steep.