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  1. In 1736, this large area north of Philadelphia was deeded by 23 chiefs of the Five Civilized Tribes to three sons of William Penn, founder of the colonial-era Province of Pennsylvania: John Penn, Thomas Penn, and Richard Penn.

  2. Mar 8, 2019 · Published: March 8, 2019. copy page link. Print Page. Joe Daniel Price/Getty Images. Philadelphia, a city in Pennsylvania whose name means City of Brotherly Love, was originally settled by...

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  4. The founder of Allentown, William Allen (1704-1780), was a wealthy shipping merchant and a loyalist to the English Crown. He served as the Mayor of Philadelphia and, in 1762, was elected as Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. All of this service helped Allen become an influential part in the development of Pennsylvania.

    • Stagecoach Service
    • Becoming A Bedroom Community
    • Higher Education and Health Care

    After the war, the valley’s connections to Philadelphia increased. The beginning of regular stagecoach service in 1796 and the chartering of a turnpike company to manage the route in 1804 transformed the King’s Road into Bethlehem Pike. The 1791 discovery of coal in the region drew investment from Philadelphia, whose entrepreneurs Josiah White (178...

    The construction of Pa. Routes 22 and 78 from the 1950s to the 1970s remade the valley into a New York City bedroom community. Commuters followed the highways west to avoid high costs of living, and bus service developed to transport workers into New York. Likewise, by the 1990s numerous New York firms relocated to the valley or built transport hub...

    Much of the valley’s redevelopment was also due to its institutions of higher learning and health care. Moravian College, founded as a women’s seminary in 1741, played a major role in strengthening Bethlehem’s historic core. Lafayette College was founded in 1826 and in 1832 Easton’s town fathers convinced Reverend George Junkin (1790-1868) to reloc...

  5. The city of Philadelphia was founded in 1682 by William Penn in the English Crown Province of Pennsylvania between the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers. Before then, the area was inhabited by the Lenape people.

  6. In 1681, William Penn, a Quaker, established a colony based on religious tolerance; it was settled by many Quakers along with its Philadelphia, its largest city, which was also the first planned city. In the mid-1700s, the colony attracted many German and Scots-Irish immigrants.

  7. Neumann also played an indirect role in creating a shrine in Allentown, Pennsylvania, where in 1857 he founded the town’s first Catholic parish, the Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

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