Source:Ordinance-1872-13
"An ordinance changing the name of Miner street, from Penna. R. R. to Herron avenue." Pittsburgh city ordinance, 1872, no. 13. Passed Apr. 22, 1872. Ordinance Book 3, p. 196. In The Municipal Record: Containing the Proceedings of the Select and Common Councils of the City of Pittsburgh, Together with the Ordinances, &c.: With an Index, vol. IV, p. 48, Pittsburgh Daily Gazette, Pittsburgh, 1872 (Internet Archive pghmunicipalrecord1872).
AN ORDINANCE—Changing the name of Miner street, from Penna. R. R. to Herron avenue.
Section 1. Be it ordained and enacted by the city of Pittsburgh in Select and Common Councils assembled, and it is hereby ordained and enacted by the authority of the same, That the name of Miner street, from the Pennsylvania Railroad to Herron avenue, be and is hereby changed to Thirty-third street.
Sec. 2. That any Ordinance or part of Ordinance conflicting with the passage of this Ordinance at the present time, be and the same is hereby repealed so far as the same affects this ordinance.
Ordained and enacted into a law, in Councils, this 22d day of April, A. D. 1872.
A. H. GROSS,
President of Select Council.
Attest: E. S. Morrow,
Clerk of Select Council.
H. W. OLIVER, Jr.,
President of Common Council.
Attest: Hugh McMaster,
Clerk of Common Council.