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  1. 1804 - Asher Miner begins publishing the Pennsylvania Correspondent and Farmer’s Advertiser in Doylestown. In 1824 it became the Bucks County Patriot , and in 1827 the Bucks County Intelligencer, the ancestor of today’s

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  2. William Doyle's 18th Century Inn, founded at the intersection of the Philadelphia to Easton, and Swedsford to Coryell's Ferry roads, was the seed that bloomed into the town now known as Doylestown.

  3. Nov 19, 2008 · We’re fighting to restore access to 500,000+ books in court this week. ... Live Music Archive Librivox Free Audio. ... History of Doylestown, old and new : from its ...

  4. Feb 29, 2008 · History of Doylestown, old and new. From its settlement to the close of the nineteenth century, 1745-1900 : Davis, W. W. H. (William Watts Hart), 1820-1910 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. An arrow pointing downward at an empty document tray.

  5. William Penn, a Quaker, determined to induce people to immigrate to America by offering cheap land. The price for land was set at £100 for 5,000 acres. Penn set sail to America in August 1692 to see his land for the first time. He established both Bucks and Philadelphia counties during his trip and also made a treaty with the Lenni Lenape tribe

  6. HISTORY. The original town was founded in 1745 and incorporated into a Bourough in 1838. William Doyle's Tavern,” the prominent white building in the center of town most commonly known for holding a Starbucks, was the 18th century inn that bloomed into the town now known as Doylestown.

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  8. Once a small village surrounded by farms, Doylestown developed into a bustling borough with a thriving downtown, a university, two museums, and commuter rail that carried passengers to Philadelphia in an hour. Prior to European colonization, the Lenni Lenape Indians lived on the land that later became Doylestown.