Historically a sparsely developed agricultural and mining community, Carrick began to urbanize around the turn of the 20th century. Lots were laid out, residents built stately homes like the Wigman House, and a spirit of progress and optimism pervaded the community. By 1906, it had over 4,000 residents.[3] In 1904, Carrick was officially organized as a borough in order to provide better services for its residents. One of the new borough's first orders of business was to construct a building "to be used as a house for Fire Company, Town Hall, and for other Borough purposes." The Carrick Borough Council commissioned Edward Stotz to design the building and purchased a lot on Brownsville Road for $20,000. Construction of the building was officially authorized in March 1905.[2]
The completed Borough Building was dedicated on June 21, 1906, the second anniversary of the borough's founding. The occasion was marked with speeches, fireworks, and a parade.[4] The Pittsburgh Press described the new building on its completion:[5]
The Carrick fire company, which is one of the best equipped in the State, will occupy half of the new $15,000 building. On the ground floor is the apparatus room containing two hose reels, one of them a two-wheeled vehicle and the other a four-wheeled one, and a large hook and ladder truck. In the rear is a finely equipped gymnasium and reading room and the basement is fitted up with shower and tub baths for the fire-fighters. The borough jail is also in the basement and the council chamber, and office of the clerk and engineer are on the second floor.
The Borough Building continued to house Carrick's local government until 1927, when the borough was annexed into the city of Pittsburgh. Afterwards, the fire department was left as the only tenant, becoming Engine Company No. 23 of the Pittsburgh Bureau of Fire.[6] In 1933, the building's 40-foot (12 m) tower and bell were removed because of safety concerns. The bell had previously been rung to call out the volunteer firefighters and to signal the borough's nightly 9 pm curfew, but after 1926 it was only used for special occasions like New Year's Eve.[7] The fire department moved to a new location in 1957 and the Borough Building was eventually converted to commercial use.[2]