List of the oldest buildings in Pennsylvania
This article attempts to list the oldest extant buildings surviving in the state of Pennsylvania in the United States of America, including the oldest houses in Pennsylvania and any other surviving structures. Some dates are approximate and based upon dendochronology, architectural studies, and historical records. Sites on the list are generally from the First Period of American architecture or earlier. To be listed here a site must:
- date from prior to 1776; or
- be the oldest building in a county, large city, or oldest of its type (church, government building, etc.),
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Lower Swedish Cabin | Drexel Hill | 1640-1650 | House | Possibly oldest log cabin or wooden house in Pennsylvania | |
Wall House | Elkins Park | 1682 | House | Oldest house in Pennsylvania which has had continuous family residency, possibly the oldest stone house in Pennsylvania with part of the house dating to 1682 | |
Caleb Pusey House | Upland | 1683 | House | Oldest English-built house in Pennsylvania. Only extant building known to have been visited by William Penn. Completed | |
Sign of the Bird in Hand | Newtown | 1686 | Tavern | Originally a residence, then tavern with other uses. Oldest frame house still standing in Pennsylvania. Famous as the site of the 1778 Newtown Skirmish during which Loyalists killed 5 and captured 16 to acquire cloth being manufactured for use by Washington's troops at Valley Forge. Now a private residence. | |
Farmar Mill | Whitemarsh | 1683-1696 | Mill | Oldest surviving mill in Pennsylvania. Also known as Mather's Mill. | |
Wynnestay | Wynnefield, Philadelphia | 1689 | House | Oldest house in Philadelphia | |
Wyck House | Germantown, Philadelphia | 1690 | House | Second oldest house in Philadelphia | |
Merion Friends Meeting House | Merion Station | 1695 | Religious | One of the oldest Quaker meeting houses in America | |
Thomas Massey House | Broomall | 1696, later additions | House | One of the oldest "English" houses in Pennsylvania, one of the oldest Quaker homes in the state | |
Morton Homestead | Prospect Park | c. 1698, later additions | House | Farm founded in 1654 | |
Edward Morgan Log House | Towamencin | 1700 | House | Home to the maternal grandfather of Daniel Boone | |
Gloria Dei (Old Swedes' Church) |
Philadelphia | 1700 | Religious | Oldest surviving church in Philadelphia | |
Brinton 1704 House | West Chester | 1704 | House | One of the oldest houses in Pennsylvania. Built by a Quaker family. | |
Rittenhouse Homestead | Blue Bell Hill (near Germantown), Philadelphia | 1707 | House | Home of William Rittenhouse, the first paper maker in British North America. Built by William Rittenhouse and his son Nicholas in 1707. 1732 birthplace of David Rittenhouse. | |
Old Trinity Church | Oxford Circle, Philadelphia | 1711 | Religious | Church of England services first held on this site in 1698 in a log meeting house that had belonged to the Oxford Society of Friends. | |
Newtown Square Friends Meeting House | Newtown Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania | 1711 | Religious | Early Welsh Quaker settlers in one of William Penn's two planned "new towns" built this meeting house in 1711. | |
Stenton | Germantown | 1723 | House | Home of James Logan, secretary of William Penn | |
Old Chester Courthouse | Chester | 1724 | Government | This is the oldest public building in continuous use in the United States. Served as a courthouse from 1724 until 1851, town hall until the 1960s. Now used for miscellaneous city, county and civic functions.[1] | |
Michael Billmeyer House | Germantown | 1730 | House | ||
Quaker Mill House | Etters | 1731 | House | One of the oldest houses in Central Pennsylvania | |
Bartram's Garden | Kingsessing (now Philadelphia) | 1731 | House | The home of John Bartram (1699 - 1777), America's first botanist and father of William Bartram (1739-1823), himself an eminent botanist and artist. | |
Ephrata Cloister | Ephrata | 1732 | Religious | Established in 1732 by Johann Conrad Beissel, it is one of the oldest religious communities in the United States. It had the second German printing press in the American colonies which published the largest book in Colonial America, Martyrs Mirror. | |
Shelter House | Emmaus | 1730's | House | Longest site of continuous habitation in the Lehigh Valley area | |
Augustus Lutheran Church | Trappe | 1743 | Religious | Oldest unchanged Lutheran church building in the United States in continuous use by the same congregation.[2][3] | |
Grumblethorpe | Germantown | 1744 | House | ||
Belmont Mansion (Philadelphia) | Philadelphia | 1745 | House | ||
Germantown White House | Germantown | 1752 | House | Twice served as temporary residence of George Washington during his presidency. | |
Old Germantown Academy and Headmasters' Houses | Germantown | 1760 | School | ||
Cliveden (Benjamin Chew House) | Germantown | 1763 | House | Scene of fighting at the Battle of Germantown | |
Fort Pitt Blockhouse | Pittsburgh | 1764 | Defense | Oldest structure in Pittsburgh and one of the oldest colonial structures west of the Allegheny Mountains | |
Harris Cameron Mansion | Harrisburg | 1766 | House | One of the oldest structures in Harrisburg built right after the French and Indian War. | |
Concord School House (Philadelphia) | Germantown | 1775 | School | ||
The Headhouse at New Market | Philadelphia | 1804 | Firehouse | Oldest firehouse in the United States | |
Dickson Tavern | Erie | 1815 | Commercial | Oldest building in Erie | |
Academy Hall | Edinboro University | 1857 | Educational | Oldest normal school building in Pennsylvania | |
Sturgis Pretzel House | Lititz | 1861 | Commercial | Oldest commercial pretzel bakery in the United States[4] | |
Leap-The-Dips | Altoona | 1902 | Entertainment | Oldest wooden roller coaster in the United States | |
See also
References
- ↑ 1724 Court House, Chester, PA
- ↑ "Augustus Lutheran Church". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
- ↑ National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ http://www.fieldtrip.com/pa/76264354.htm Accessed July 27, 2007
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.