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Dec 14, 2021 · The Burial of the Old Pioneers of Longmeadow and Springfield Where are Benjamin Cooley and Sarah buried and for that matter their children? Sadly, their graves have been lost. The early settlers o…
The cemetery once stood along the river and the inhabitants were all the founders and early settlers of Springfield. In 1848 the graves were removed to the newer Springfield Cemetery, also known as Peabody Cemetery. More than 2,000 remains from the Old Burying Ground were placed in a mass grave unidentified.
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- English Quaker Families
- German Families
- Other Places
Like the Tapestry, this project will track migrations out of colonial Pennsylvania. Migrations to Cambria, Indiana, and Centrecounties may be of interest.
A town in Upper Bucks County on Richlandtown Pike between Hellertown and Richlandtown. Springfield Historical Society. P. O. Box 211. Springfield, PA 19064. Springfield Township. Knecht's Bridge. Bucks County is a class 2A county comprised of 23 boroughs and 31 townships. Allentown in the year 1895. Wednesday, October 16, 1895.
Listed in this table are the qualifying ancestors—those whose residency in Pennsylvania falls within one of the required time periods—from First Families applications approved to date. Inclusion of an ancestral name is acceptable proof of residency for future applications. Please note that this list is not exclusive.
AncestorLocationDateAddleman, John MichaelChester1760Albright/Albrect, JohnLancaster1740Alexander, AlexanderBedford1776Alexander, FerryPhiladelphia1894May 1, 2016 · here are for official Pennsylvania colonial records in York County, beginning 1736 through the end of full land acquisition process (for some tracts as late as 1874.) There are now some 11,400 Colonial surnames listed for York County! When properly summarized they detail who the settlers were, when they arrived
17th Century Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania as described in 1843. [1] The earliest settlements made by Europeans within the limits of Pennsylvania were by a colony of Swedes, who in the year 1638 purchased from the natives the land upon the western shore of Delaware River and Bay, from Cape Henlopen to the falls opposite the present city of Trenton.