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      • Present-day Plymouth Meeting was originally settled by members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, who built the Plymouth Friends Meetinghouse in 1708. They sailed from Devonshire, England, on the ship Desire, arriving in Philadelphia on June 23, 1686. The settlement takes its name from the founders' hometown of Plymouth in Devon.
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  2. Plymouth Meeting was founded in the year 1686. James Fox and Francis Rawle, with a group of Quakers from Plymouth, England, purchased 5000 acres from William Penn, which became Plymouth Township.

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  3. Plymouth Meeting House is the name of a village situated at the intersection of the Plymouth and Perkiomen turnpikes, on the township line. On this [Plymouth] side is the meeting house, school house and four houses; and in Whitemarsh two stores, a blacksmith and wheelwright shop, post office and twenty-four houses.

    Name
    Image
    Address
    Built
    Maulsby Barn and Abolition Hall (see ...
    4006 Butler Pike
    c. 1795 1856
    Samuel Maulsby built the stone barn, c.
    Hoveneden House Samuel Maulsby House ...
    1 E. Germantown Pike NE corner Germantown ...
    c. 1795
    Built by Samuel Maulsby. 1871 – Estate of ...
    Plymouth Meeting Country Store and Post ...
    3-5 E. Germantown Pike
    c. 1826-1827
    Built by Samuel Maulsby. His son Jonathan ...
    Jones-Williams House [7]
    4 E. Germantown Pike
    c. 1787
    1871 – J. R. Ellis [5]
  4. Plymouth Meeting was founded in the year 1686. James Fox and Francis Rawle, with a group of Quakers from Plymouth, England, purchased 5000 acres from William Penn, which became Plymouth Township. Their original plan was to engage in the wool business, but it never happened so they sold the property to some Welsh Quakers.

  5. Present-day Plymouth Meeting was originally settled by members of the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers, who built the Plymouth Friends Meetinghouse in 1708. They sailed from Devonshire, England, on the ship Desire, arriving in Philadelphia on June 23, 1686. The settlement takes its name from the founders' hometown of Plymouth in Devon.

  6. May 22, 2013 · First Name: Suzanne. Last Name: Marinell. Mailing Address: PO Box 167. 19462 Plymouth Meeting , PA. See map: Google Maps. Pennsylvania. Phone: 610-828-8111. Website: http://www.plymtghistsoc.freehosting.net. Blog:

  7. Apr 20, 2016 · In 1859, George Corson II, co-founder of the Plymouth Meeting Anti-Slavery Society, converted a barn on his farm into a 150-seat Abolition Hall to host lectures and meetings with key anti-slavery speakers like Lucretia Mott and William Lloyd Garrison just steps away from the Plymouth Friends Meetinghouse, the village’s 308-year-old namesake ...

  8. About the Plymouth Meeting Historical Society. Organized in 1952, The Plymouth Meeting Historical Society gained stature when it succeeded in saving the Village of Plymouth Meeting from the threat of the proposed Blue Route Expressway. Through the efforts of the Society, the Village of Plymouth Meeting was placed on the National Register of ...

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