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The city of Philadelphia, as laid out by William Penn, comprised only that
portion of the present city situated between South and Vine Streets and
Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers. In fact, the city proper was that portion
between High (Market) Street and Dock Creek. Here is where the pioneers
dug caves in the banks of the Delaware or built huts on the land higher
up. Meanwhile, the women equally busy in their sphere, had lighted their
fire on the bare earth, and having "their kettle slung between two
poles upon a stick transverse," thus prepared the meal of homely and
frugal fare for the repast of diligent builders.
Native Americans were more or less present, either as spectators of the
improvements then progressing, or, venders of their game and venison from
the neighboring wilds. The Swedes and Dutch, who were the earliest settlers,
as neighbors, brought their productions to market as a matter of course.
Settlements were made, however, outside of these boundaries, and in the
course of time they became separately incorporated and had separate
governments, making congeries of towns and districts, the whole group being
known abroad simply as Philadelphia. Several of these were situated
immediately contiguous to the "city proper": Southwark and
Moyamensing in the south, and Northern Liberties, Kensigton, Spring Garden
and Penn District to the north, and West Philadelphia to the west — all of
which were practically one town continuously built up.
Besides these, there were a number of other outlying townships, villages
and settlements near the built-up town, though detached from it. Among these
were Bridesburg, Frankford, Harrowgate, Holmesburg, the unincorporated
Northern Liberties, Port Richmond, Nicetown, Rising Sun, Fox Chase,
Germantown, Roxborough, Falls of Schuylkill, unincorporated Penn township,
Francisville, Hamilton Village, Mantua, Blockley, Kingsessing and Passyunk.
Some of these also became absorbed in the extending streets of the
congeries of towns of which Philadelphia was composed, and in 1854 they were
all consolidated under one municipal government, the boundaries of which are
coincident with those of the old county of Philadelphia. In the earlier
times some of the districts mentioned had marked characteristics, but these
have mostly passed away.
Southwark, immediately on the river front, was marked by great
wood-yards for supplying fuel before the days of anthracite coal, also by
the sheds and yards of boat-builders and mast-makers, and by ship-builders'
yards down to the site of the United States Navy Yard.
A great many of the Southwark dwellings were inhabited by sea captains
and seafaring men, and down to quite a recent period a considerable portion
of its inhabitants were the families of seagoing people and
"watermen." The wood-yards, mast and shipyards have gone to other
localities, and their old sites are now occupied by commercial warehouses,
extensive sugar refineries, the wharves and depots of the sugar, molasses
and West Indies trade, the great grain warehouses, elevators and
shipping-piers of the Pennsylvania R.R. Co., the wharves and depots of the
American and Red Star lines of ocean steamships. The district was also
characterized by the extensive machine-shops and iron-works of Merricks,
Morris & Tasker, Savery and others, as well as by the mechanical work
promoted by the navy yard, which was situated at the foot of Federal Street,
previous to removing to League Island.
The Northern Liberties also had its great cord-wood wharves and
yards along the river front, and extensive lumber-yards. The wood-yards have
mostly disappeared, and have given place to large markets for farm-produce,
commercial warehouses, railroad landings, depots and shipping wharves. Some
of the lumber-yards remain, however. This district was also characterized,
particularly along Second Street, by its farmers' market-yards for the
wholesale trade in butter, eggs, poultry, meats, vegetables and other
products of the farms of the adjacent country. Some of the fine old
market-taverns and produce-yards still remain, but their marked
characteristics have become obscured by the spread of the great city. Long
before the consolidation of the Northern Liberties into the city Second
Street was famous for its fine retail shops, and Third Street was the site
of a large wholesale trade in groceries, provisions and leather. Second
Street is now lined by a double row of retail stores along nearly its entire
length, not only in the old Northern Liberties, but for miles below and
above. Pegg's Run and Cohocksink Creek, which flowed through the Northern
Liberties, were the sites of numerous extensive tan-yards. One of the
pioneer mills in Philadelphia's great industries, the Old Globe Mill, was
near the line of the Northern Liberties, Germantown Avenue below Girard
Avenue. The Northern Liberties embraced what are now the Eleventh, Twelfth
and part of the Sixteenth Wards of the city.
Kensington was a ship- and boat-building district, and another
considerable portion of its old time inhabitants were fishermen engaged in
supplying the Philadelphia markets. Kensington, however, soon got into the
iron and steel manufacture, and the building of steam-machinery, the
outcropping of which may be seen in the large works now in operation there
and on the river front above. Kensington embraced part of the present
Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Wards.
Spring Garden District, which is now characterized by extensive
manufacturing establishments of nearly all descriptions — among them the
great Baldwin Locomotive Works and Powers & Weightman's chemical
laboratory — and for its masses of handsome dwellings, was, in the old
time, one of the most pleasant suburbs of Philadelphia and the principal
dwelling-place of the Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Butchers or
Victuallers.
Port Richmond, occupying the Delaware River front to the north and
northeast of Old Kensington, was brought into prominence by the
establishment at that point of the tidewater terminus of the Reading R.R.
Co. For its immense coal traffic by sea. This at once began to improve the
unproductive land in the vicinity; for the shipping-piers, the coal-depots,
the engine-houses, workshops, offices, etc., were accompanied followed by a
large increase of population the erection of dwellings, great activity and
rapid progress in all respects. The coal trade built it up in the first
place, but the district is now the centre of a manufacturing trade that has
but few superiors in the United States.
The other districts and villages now incorporated in the city have been
built up so that they now in fact, as in name, the city itself.
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