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- PO Box 941
- Horsham
- Pennsylvania 19044
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200.443.7154
- F
200.443.7409
- Email:
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A Brief History
HORSHAM TOWNSHIP is
named after the town of Horsham in Sussex County, England. Horsham is one
of several townships in Montgomery County whose shape and size were determined
by master survey lines drawn by William Penn's engineers as they first
plotted this part of the colony for sale and settlement. Parallel lines,
projected at intervals of a mile and a half and extending in a northwesterly
direction from settlements along the Delaware, served not only as base
lines for measurement of individual land grants but also as courses for
future highways. County Line Road, Horsham Road, and Welsh Road are examples
of highways so laid out. The effect of these survey lines upon the developmental
pattern of Eastern Montgomery County is very much in evidence today.
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- In 1684, the entire township of 17 square miles
was made available to individual purchasers. Samuel Carpenter, from the
town of Horsham in Sussex County, England, after which the township is
named, purchased five thousand acres, forty-two hundred of them within
the present boundaries of the township. In 1709, Carpenter, then treasurer
of Pennsylvania, began to sell tracts of land to migrating Quakers. In
1717, Horsham Township was established as a municipal entity by a vote
of the people.
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- In 1718, Sir William Keith, then Lieutenant Governor
of Pennsylvania, acquired twelve hundred acres of Carpenter's land on which
he erected a house in keeping with the dignity of his office. The development
of Keith's "plantation" proved to be a step in establishing closer
ties between Horsham and neighboring communities, particularly those of
Hatboro and Willow Grove. He was responsible for the construction of the
present Easton Road (US Highway 611) from the Old York Road junction at
Willow Grove to his mansion on County Line Road in 1722.
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- The first significant settlement in the township
revolved around the junction of Horsham and Easton Roads and was known
as Horshamville. Keith's extension of Easton Road prompted the establishment
of the Horsham Friends Meeting House. The township's early social and economic
life revolved around this Meeting House.
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- In a similar way, Prospectville, originally known
as Cashtown, was established at the junction of two roads, Limekiln Pike
and Horsham Road. This portion of Limekiln Pike was an extension of the
original segment established in 1693 to provide a thoroughfare between
Old York Road and the Limekilns of Thomas Fitzwater in Upper Dublin
Township.
Prospectville, on a high elevation point within the township, offering
a resting spot with a tavern for those traveling along either Limekiln
Pike or Horsham Road. Here lived several generations of the Simpson family,
one of whom was the mother of Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th President of the
United States.
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- The hamlet of Davis Grove grew at the intersection
of Keith's Road (now called Governor's Road) and Privet Road and was once
a focal point of community life. It was here the residents of the township
came to vote, discuss politics, and attend community meetings. The "Golden
Ball Inn," which at one time was used for housing guests of Governor
Keith, enjoyed much Revolutionary splendor. The two roads were formerly
through links. Keith's Road extended from Easton Road to Keith Valley Road
and Privet Road, from Horsham Road to Easton Road. Expansion of the Willow
Grove Naval Air Station caused the closing of these roads and the absorption
of the hamlet. Today, there are virtually no remaining signs of the original
settlement.
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- Through most of the early and mid 19th Century,
Horsham population grew slowly. Its character was not altered in any significant
way until about 1872, when the North Pennsylvania Railroad extended a rail
line from Glenside to New Hope and established a station in the nearby
community of Hatboro, two and three quarter miles east of the nucleus of
Horshamville. Horsham-Hatboro- Byberry Road provided easy access to Hatboro's
station and, as a result, residential development began along the road
virtually linking the two communities together. By 1890, the township's
population reached 1,300.
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- In 1896, the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company's
northern extension of the Philadelphia-Willow Grove trolley service was
extended to Doylestown along Easton Road from the Willow Grove Amusement
Park at Easton and Welsh Roads. This provided various connections to other
trolley lines at Willow Grove for direct commuting routes to other points
within the City of Philadelphia. The trolley service along Easton Road
remained in operation until 1931 when it was replaced by buses. In 1926,
Harold F. Pitcairn, a pioneer in the development of the autogiro, a forerunner
of the helicopter, outgrew his flying field in Bryn Athyn and purchased
191 acres of farmland along Easton Road in the vicinity of Graeme Park.
The new "Pitcairn Field" remained in operation for testing "autogiros"
until 1942 when the United States Navy purchased the field. Today, the
base is still in operation and, after the acquisition of additional land
for the expansion of facilities, it has become one of the largest Naval
Air Stations in the nation.
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