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List of the oldest buildings in Pennsylvania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article lists the oldest extant buildings in the state of Pennsylvania in the United States, including the oldest houses in the state and certain other extant structures. Some dates are approximate, based upon dendrochronology, architectural studies, and historical records. Sites on the list are generally from the First Period of American architecture or earlier.

All listed sites either date from prior to 1776, or are the oldest building in their county or large city, or are the oldest of their type (for example: churches, schools, firehouses, or government buildings).

Name Image Location Year Type Notes
Lower Swedish Cabin
Upper Darby, Drexel Hill c. 1640–50 Cabin Possibly oldest log cabin or wooden house in Pennsylvania. Built by Swedish Settlers.
Boelson Cottage
Philadelphia, Fairmount Park c. 1678–84 House Oldest structure in Fairmount Park; possibly the oldest extant house in Philadelphia
Wall House
Elkins Park 1682 House Oldest house in Pennsylvania which has had continuous family residency; possibly the oldest stone house in Pennsylvania
Caleb Pusey House
Upland 1683 House Oldest English-built house in Pennsylvania; only extant building known to have been visited by William Penn
Hop Angel Brauhaus
Philadelphia, Fox Chase 1683 Restaurant German-American fare; built in 1683 and a restaurant since the mid-20th century;[1] formerly, the Old Brauhaus, the Blue Ox Brauhaus, and the Blue Ox Bistro[2]
Pont Reading
Ardmore 1683 House
Sellers Hall
Upper Darby 1684 House Originally home to the Sellers family, including John Sellers, a scientist and founding member of the American Philosophical Society.[3]
Growden Mansion
Bensalem Township 1685 House
William Smith House
Wrightstown 1686 House
Mouns Jones House
Douglassville 1686 House Swedish cabin built by Mans Mouce Jonasson in 1686 in Douglassville in Berks County, Pennsylvania. It's a 2+12-story, three bay stone dwelling. It is part of the National Register of Historic Places.
Sign of the Bird in Hand
Newtown 1686 Tavern Originally a residence, then a tavern with other uses; oldest extant frame house in Pennsylvania; site of the 1778 Newtown Skirmish during which Loyalists killed five and captured 16 to acquire cloth being manufactured for use by Washington's troops at Valley Forge; now a private residence[citation needed]
Phineas Pemberton House
Bristol Township 1687 House
Wynnestay
Philadelphia, Wynnefield 1689 House One of the oldest houses in Philadelphia
Farmar Mill
Fort Washington 1690 Mill Historic mill building; original terminus for Skippack Pike
Thomas Massey House
Broomall 1696, later additions House One of the oldest English Quaker houses in the state
Morton Homestead
Prospect Park c. 1698, later additions House Farm founded in 1654
Edward Morgan Log House
Towamencin 1770[4] House Home to the maternal grandfather of Daniel Boone
Gloria Dei
(Old Swedes' Church)
Philadelphia, Southwark 1700 Religious Oldest surviving church in Philadelphia
Wolley Stille
Wallingford 1700 House
Langhorne Hotel
Langhorne c. 1700 Tavern Built by William Huddleston; originally known as the Tavern at Attleboro,[5] until the village was renamed for Jeremiah Langhorne in 1876[6]
Brinton 1704 House
West Chester 1704 House One of the oldest houses in Pennsylvania
Rittenhouse Homestead
Philadelphia, Wissahickon Valley Park 1707 House Home of William Rittenhouse, the first paper maker in British North America; built by William Rittenhouse and his son Nicholas in 1707; birthplace of David Rittenhouse
Old Trinity Church
Philadelphia, Oxford Circle 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.
Merion Friends Meeting House
Merion Station c. 1715 Religious One of the oldest Quaker meeting houses in America
Newtown Square Friends Meeting House
Newtown Township, Delaware County 1711 Religious Early Welsh Quaker settlers in one of William Penn's two planned "new towns" built this meeting house in 1711.
Thomas Story House
Upper Roxborough, Philadelphia 1717/84 House The home is described by its current owner as “Dutch Medieval,” owing to the Germanic styling found throughout. The dwelling's walls are built of random Wissahickon schist with ceiling beams of hand-hewn oak. The Dutch-doors on the Ridge Avenue side are also a common feature of Colonial German architecture, a feature that both let in fresh air and sunlight while keeping out stray barnyard animals.
Hans Herr House
Willow Street 1719 House Oldest house in Lancaster County; oldest surviving structure used as a Mennonite meetinghouse in America
Abraham Rittenhouse House
Historic RittenhouseTown c. 1720 House The Abraham Rittenhouse House (c. 1720) with a c. 1860 addition on the left.[7]
Elfreth's Alley
Philadelphia, Old City 1720–1830 Houses Claimed to be the nation's oldest residential street; two rows of Federal and Georgian brick houses built between 1720 and 1830, with a total of 32 extant houses[8]
Wyck House
Philadelphia, Germantown c. 1700–20, later additions House
Stenton
Philadelphia, Germantown 1723 House Home of James Logan, secretary of William Penn
Old Chester Courthouse
Chester 1724 Government The oldest public building in continuous use in the United States; served as a courthouse from 1724 until 1851, and the town hall until the 1960s; now used for miscellaneous city, county and civic functions[9]
Christian Beidler's Grist Mill
Berks County 1729–1738 Mill Built during the reign of George II of Great Britain, Christian Beidler's grist mill is one of the oldest commercial buildings in the United States, dating from before the start of the Industrial Revolution.[citation needed]
Michael Billmeyer House
Philadelphia, Germantown 1730 House
The Bake House at RittenhouseTown
Philadelphia, Germantown c. 1730 Mill
Quaker Mill House
Goldsboro 1731 House One of the oldest houses in central Pennsylvania[citation needed]
Bartram's Garden
Philadelphia, Kingsessing 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; one of the oldest religious communities in the United States; had the second German printing press in the American colonies which published the largest book by page count in the colonies, Martyrs Mirror
Shelter House
Emmaus c. 1734–41 House Longest site of continuous habitation in the Lehigh Valley area
Old Norriton Presbyterian Church
East Norriton Township 1737 Religious Congregation practicing in vicinity since 1698.
Reading Furnace Home
East Nantmeal Township 1736 House & furnace Historical house owned by the local Irons works owner and a United States Army officer Samuel Van Leer. The location is listed as a temporary George Washington Headquarter.
Augustus Lutheran Church
Trappe 1743 Religious Oldest unchanged Lutheran church building in the United States in continuous use by the same congregation[10][11]
Grumblethorpe
Philadelphia, Germantown 1744 House
Wister Tenant House
Philadelphia, 5269 Germantown Avenue c. 1745 House
Belmont Mansion
Philadelphia, Fairmount Park 1745 House
The Monastery
Philadelphia, Wissahickon Park 1747 House
Glen Fern
Philadelphia, 1100 Livezey Lane 1747 House Glen Fern, also known as the Livezey House, is a fine example of Colonial architecture. This mill that later was one of the largest on the Wissahickon, just below Cresheim Creek, was built by Thomas Shoemaker in 1746 on twenty acres of land purchased from John Harmer on February 5, 1746. The deed mentions buildings and improvements.
Green Tree Tavern
Philadelphia, 6023 Germantown Avenue 1748 House This attractive house of stone was built by Daniel Pastorius, a grandson of Francis Daniel Pastorius, in 1748. The house contains a date stone with the inscription “DSP 1748,” for Daniel and Sarah Pastorius. Daniel kept a tavern there until his death in 1754.
Cresheim Cottage
Philadelphia, 7402 Germantown Avenue c. 1748 House A plaque on the exterior states the cottage was built in 1700 but in all likelihood it was constructed about half a century later.
Shippen-Blair House
Philadelphia, 6043 Germantown Avenue c. 1750 House This house was also known as "The Laurens."
Van Leer Cabin Tredyffrin Township, Pennsylvania 1759 Cabin Historic cabin and one of the last historical dwellings in Tredyffrin Township, Pennsylvania
Germantown White House
Philadelphia, Germantown 1752 House Twice served as temporary residence of George Washington during his presidency
Old Germantown Academy and Headmasters' Houses
Philadelphia, Germantown 1760 School
Mount Pleasant Mansion
Philadelphia, Fairmount Park 1761-62 House Built by Thomas Nevell. John Adams visited the mansion in 1775 and called it "the most elegant seat in Pennsylvania."
Cliveden
Philadelphia, Germantown 1762 House Home of Thomas Pettit Dover Township, York County 1763 House Home of Benjamin Chew and scene of fighting during 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 1765 House
Chichester Friends Meetinghouse
Upper Chichester Township 1769 Religious Quaker meeting house first built in 1688; rebuilt after a fire in 1769.
Summerseat
Morrisville c. 1770 House Only house in America owned by two signers of the United States Constitution and Declaration of Independence, Robert Morris and George Clymer; headquarters of George Washington while he plotted the Battle of Trenton
Wyckoff-Mason House
Verona 1774 House
Concord School House
Philadelphia, Germantown 1775 School
White Horse Tavern (Douglassville, Pennsylvania)
Douglassville 1780 Tavern The building operated as a tavern for 90 years until it was converted into a three-family residence in 1870. In 1971, the building was restored and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.
Van Leer Pleasant Hill Plantation
West Nantmeal Township, Pennsylvania c. 1780 House Historic stone farmhouse located near Glen Moore in West Nantmeal Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania
Tomlinson-Huddleston House
Langhorne 1783 House
Denison House
Forty Fort 1790 House Oldest house in Luzerne County
Headhouse at New Market
Philadelphia, Society Hill 1804 Firehouse Oldest firehouse in the United States
Dickson Tavern
Erie 1815 Commercial Oldest building in Erie
Academy Hall
Edinboro 1857 School Oldest normal school building in Pennsylvania; on the Edinboro University campus
Sturgis Pretzel House
Lititz 1861 Commercial Oldest commercial pretzel bakery in the United States[12]

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Transcription

See also

References

  1. ^ Craig LaBan (December 12, 2010). "A neighborhood eatery gets back to its German roots. There are things to like, but little lived up to one expat's expectations." (archive). philly.com. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
  2. ^ "About Us: Hop Angel Brauhaus" (archive). hopangel.com. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
  3. ^ "Friends of Sellers Hall".
  4. ^ "Dendrochronology: How Old is It?". Morgan Log House. Retrieved February 7, 2022.
  5. ^ Valone, Sally. "Langhorne Hotel" (archive). historiclanghorne.org. Historic Langhorne Association. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  6. ^ Gannett, Henry (1905). The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 181.
  7. ^ "Abraham Rittenhouse Home".
  8. ^ "History". elfrethsalley.org. Elfreth's Alley Association. Retrieved November 20, 2017.
  9. ^ "Saving Chester's 1724 Court House: Oldest Public Building in United States" (archive). oldchesterpa.com. The Chester Bicentennial Committee. Retrieved November 5, 2018.
  10. ^ "Augustus Lutheran Church". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved November 8, 2007.
  11. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  12. ^ http://www.fieldtrip.com/pa/76264354.htm Accessed July 27, 2007
This page was last edited on 14 May 2024, at 14:14
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