Pennsylvania
About Pennsylvania
History of Pennsylvania
Before the state existed, the area was home to the Delaware (also known as Lenni Lenape), Susquehanna, Iroquois, Eriez, Shawnee, and other Native American tribes.
In 1643, the southeastern portion of the state, in the vicinity of Philadelphia, was settled by Sweden, but control later passed to the Netherlands, and then to England (later Great Britain).
On March 4, 1681, Charles II of England granted a land charter to William Penn for the area that now includes Pennsylvania. Penn then founded a colony there as a place of religious freedom for the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), and named it for the Latin phrase meaning “Penn’s woods”.
A large tract of land north and west of Philadelphia, in Montgomery, Chester, and Delaware Counties, was settled by Welsh Quakers and called the “Welsh Tract”. Even today many cities and towns in that area bear the names of Welsh municipalities.
The western portions of Pennsylvania were among disputed territory between the colonial British and French during the French and Indian War. The French established numerous fortifications in the area, including the pivotal Fort Duquesne on top of which the city of Pittsburgh was built.
The colony’s reputation of religious freedom also attracted significant populations of German and Scots-Irish settlers who helped to shape colonial Pennsylvania and later went on to populate the neighboring states further west.
In 1704 the “three lower counties” of New Castle, Kent, and Sussex gained a separate legislature, and in 1710 a separate executive council, to form the new colony Delaware.
Pennsylvania and Delaware were two of the thirteen colonies that revolted against British rule in the American Revolution of 1776. Pennsylvania became the second state on 12 December 1787 (five days after Delaware became the first).
Pennsylvania also saw the Battle of Gettysburg, near Gettysburg. Many historians consider this battle the major turning point of the American Civil War. Dead from this battle rest at Gettysburg National Cemetery, site of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.
In the latter half of the 19th century, the U.S. oil (kerosene) industry was born in western Pennsylvania, which supplied the vast majority of U.S. kerosene for years thereafter, and saw the rise and fall of oil boom towns.
During the 20th century Pennsylvania’s existing iron industries expanded into a major center of steel production. Shipbuilding and numerous other forms of manufacturing flourished in the eastern part of the state, and coal mining was also extremely important in many regions. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Pennsylvania received very large numbers of immigrants from Europe seeking work; dramatic, sometimes violent confrontations took place between organized labor and the state’s industrial concerns.
Pennsylvania was hard-hit by the decline of the steel industry and other heavy U.S. industries during the late 20th century.
Pennsylvania
Allentown Altoona Barkeyville Beaver Falls Bedford Bensalem Bethel Bethlehem Blairsville Blakeslee Bloomsburg Braddock Hills Bradford Breezewood Bridgeville Bristol Brookville Burnham Butler Camp Hill Canonsburg Carlisle Chambersburg Clarion Clarks Summit Clearfield Concordville Coraopolis Cranberry Township Danville Delaware Water Gap Delmont Denver Dickson City Donegal Drums DuBois Dunmore East Stroudsburg Easton Ebensburg Edinboro Enola Erie Essington Exton Farrell Fort Washington Frackville Franklin Frazer Gettysburg Gibsonia Glen Mills Grantville Greencastle Greensburg Grove City Hamlin Hanover Harrisburg Hazleton Hermitage Hershey Horsham Hummelstown Indiana Intercourse Johnstown Jonestown Kennett Square King of Prussia Kittanning Lake Harmony Lamar Lancaster Langhorne Lansdale Latrobe Lebanon Levittown Lewisburg Ligonier Lock Haven Malvern Manheim Mansfield Mars Marshalls Creek Matamoras Meadville Mechanicsburg Media Mendenhall Mercer Middletown Milesburg Milford Mill Hall Millersville Monroeville Montgomeryville Moosic Morgantown Morrisville Mount Pocono Mountville New Castle New Columbia New Cumberland New Holland New Hope New Kensington New Stanton North East Oaks Paradise Philadelphia Pine Grove Pittsburgh Pittston Plymouth Meeting Pottstown Pottsville Quakertown Reading Sayre Scranton Selinsgrove Sewickley Shamokin Dam Sharon Shippensburg Somerset St. Davids St. Marys State College Stroudsburg Tannersville Towanda Trevose Tunkhannock Uniontown Warren Warrington Washington Wayne Waynesboro Waynesburg West Chester West Conshohocken West Hazleton West Middlesex West Mifflin White Haven Wilkes-Barre Williamsport Willow Grove Wormleysburg Wyomissing Yardley York


