My aunt, uncle and cousins loved living down there until the river rose and flooded the road going in there. If they wanted to get out they had to walk up to Brownshill Road. It was nice and quiet down there at the time they lived there. My uncle died and my aunt is in a home so they sold the house there. Sharon On 11/10/07, alenkner@stargate.net <alenkner@stargate.net> wrote: > > Sharon, > > There are only about 18 houses in Duck Hollow, if that. It's now the > most secluded neighborhood in Pittsburgh now that Seldom Seen has > been ruined. Your first exposure to Duck Hollow is one of disbelief. > > Al > > > > At 12:45 AM 11/10/2007, Sharon Coyne wrote: > >My aunt and uncle lived in Duck's Hollow for years. My uncle's parents > owned > >the house and when his dad died him and my aunt moved in to take care of > his > >mother. I'm not sure if there were boarding houses there but since the > >Homestead Steel Mill was right across the river there may have been > there. A > >lot of the mill workers that traveled to Homestead to work would rent > >apartments in the early days. > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > PA-PITTSBURGH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >