The web sites, libraries, and museums listed below are very helpful to any person interested in historical Philadelphia. The staff have been very helpful to anyone looking for information. Check these websites for the most current information, as it can change week to week. These sites are not controlled by Old World Philly web site. These links may be opened in a new browser window. Links to websites outside of Old World Philly, are offered for your convenience in accessing related information, but do not constitute an endorsement of the website, or its content, nor does it suggest that there are not other websites which may offer related information. Old World Philly takes no responsibility for the views, content or accuracy of the information presented by an external website. Please read and adhere to all of the copyright and other rights/restrictions concerning their pictures, paintings, texts, maps, etc...

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Atwater Kent Museum of Philadelphia
15 South 7th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106
Phone 215.685.4830
Fax 215.685.4837
email info@philadelphiahistory.org
Website http://www.philadelphiahistory.org/akm/history/


The Historical Society of Pennsylvania
1300 Locust Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107
Phone: 215-732-6200
Fax: 215-732-2680
Website http://www.hsp.org/default.aspx?id=74


Center for Greater Philadelphia
3701 Chestnut Street, 6th Fl. East
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Phone: (215) 898-8713
Fax: (215) 898-9783
eMail: cgpinfo@pobox.upenn.edu
Website: http://www.cgp.upenn.edu/ctr_history.html


Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation
30 S. 17th Street
Suite 1710
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Phone: (215) 599-0776
Fax: (215) 599-0773
Website: http://www.gophila.com


Philadelphia Convention & Visitors Bureau
1700 Market Street, Suite 3000
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Phone: 215-636-3300
Fax: 215-636-3327
eMail: webmaster@pcvb.org
Web site: http://www.pcvb.org


City Of Philadelphia
Website: http://www.phila.gov/visitors/index.html


The Independence Visitor Center Corporation
One North Independence Mall West
6th and Market Streets
Philadelphia, PA 19106
Phone: 800-537-7676
eMail: inforequest@independencevisitorcenter.com
Website: http://www.independencevisitorcenter.com/map_cc.pdf


The Library Company of Philadelphia
1314 Locust Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107
Phone: 215 546-3181
Website: http://www.librarycompany.org/instance.htm


Philadelphia Athletics Historical Society
6 North York Road
Hatboro, PA 19040
Phone: 1-800-318-0483
Fax: 215-323-9902
Website: http://www.philadelphiaathletics.org/a2.html


Museum of American Indian
Address: One Bowling Green
New York, NY 10004
Phone: 212-514-3700
Website: http://www.nmai.si.edu
Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily; Thursdays until 8 p.m.


New York Public Library
Address: Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street
Phone: 212 930 0830
Website: http://www.nypl.org/
Hours: Check website

National Archives Northeast
Address: 201 Varick Street 12th Floor
New York, NY 10014
Phone: 1-866-840-1752 or 212-401-1620
Website: http://www.archives.gov/northeast/nyc/


American Museum of National History
Address: Central Park West at 79th Street
New York, NY 10024-5192
Phone: 212 769-5100
Website: http://www.amnh.org/
Hours: open daily, 10am-5:45pm


Columbia University Libraries
Address: 201 Butler Library
535 West 114th St.
New York, NY 10027
Phone: (212) 854-2271
Website: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/
Hours: check website


New York University Library
Address: check website
Website: http://library.nyu.edu/about/locations.html
Hours: check website


University Of Texas at Austin
Perry-Castaņeda Library Map Collection
Website: http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/pennsylvania.html


Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia,_Pennsylvania
We list this site because we feel they
embody the concept that the web is meant for knowledge.
Great site you should check out.

Links

You will find links to other websites listed here and through out our site.
These links are available as a matter of convenience to our visitors.
The association of these links does not suggest our endorsement
or responsibility of content and its use.
Please review the terms, conditions and privacy statements of each site you visit.

TIMELINE 1681-1907



1632 Area to be known as Philadelphia is included in the Maryland Charter.

1646 Swedes form on Tinicum Island.

1681 William Penn lays out city.

1682 Land purchased from Swedes. Great Treaty of Friendship with Lenape Indians est.

1684 The first wharfs are built.

1687 Log Cabin Prison erected at Second/High.

1689 Friends Public School est.

1690's Philadelphia becomes a trafficker of pirated goods. Large waves of German immigrants begins.

1693 Slate Roof House built house Samuel Carpenter as well as William Penn.

1696 The Great Meeting House is constructed at the corner of High and Second Street.

1701 Municipal Charter est. Christ Church est at Second/High/Mulberry.

1702 Queen Anne's War begins.

1704 Buttonwood Presbyterian Church est. at High/Bank.

1708 First court house est at High/Second.

1713 Treaty of Utrecht ends Queen Ann's War.

1719 First newspaper American Weekly started.

1722 New prison at Third/High erected.

1723 Ben Franklin arrives in Philadelphia.

1724 Christ Church est at Second/Market.

1729 Philadelphia Gazette begins.

1730 Large waves of Northern Irish begins. Large fire rages in city.

1732 State House building begins. Friends Alms House erected.

1733 Poor Richard's Almanac est. German Reformed Church erected. First Catholic Chapel erected in St. Joseph's parish.

1736 Philadelphia Fire Dept began.

1740 Large waves of Scot-Irish.

1741 State House completed. First large riots recorded in Philadelphia.

1743 St. Michael's German Lutheran Church erected.

1747 Union Library Company est. Batteries are est to protect against French and Spanish pirates. Franklin published The Plain Truth.

1751 Liberty Bell rings. Franklin's Philadelphia Experiments propels science.

1753 Due to crack bell is recast. Anti Catholic sentiment surges as bigots try to burn down St. Joseph's Chapel.

1754 French Indian War.

1755 College of Philadelphia est. Pennsylvania Hospital est. Regular mail service begins to New York.

1758 Franklin writes The Way to Wealth, Poor Richard's Almanac. St. Peter's Chapel added.

1760 Large group of German immigrants. St. Paul's Chapel added.

1763 British victory signed in Paris.

1765 The Stamp Act - the beginning of the end for England in the colonies.

1764 The Currency Act - England tries to control colonial paper.

1767 Townshend Revenue Acts - more fuel on the fire.

1773 The Tea Act - the final blow. Riots and protest follow in force.

1766 Southwark Theater opens.

1774 Paul Revere rides into town with news. The first Continental Congress meets in Philadelphia.

1775 Lexington and Concord news reaches Philadelphia. America is at war. George Washington enters the city to command the Continental forces.

1776 A call for the est of government free from British rule. Founders like Thomas Jefferson and John Hancock work to est uniformed voting. Jefferson writes the Declaration of Independence at Market/Seventh. On the 4th of July the Liberty Bell ring to proclaim freedom throughout the land. Smallpox hits population.

1777 Cornwallis marches into Philadelphia. Battle of Germantown occurs.

1778 American soldiers are almost starved to death in British prisoner camps. American troops return to capture Philadelphia. A great fire hits the city.

1779 University of Pennsylvania est.

1782 Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown.

1783 Signing of the peace treaty Paris. George Washington enters the city victorious.

1790 Philadelphia temporary federal capital.

1791 Chestnut Theater built.

1793 First Presbyterian Church built. Yellow fever hits.

1794 John Jay's treaty signed.

1799 George Washington dies.

1800 Philadelphia is America's largest city with a pop of 65,000.

1805 Academy of Fine Arts est.

1812 War. Academy of Natural Sciences est.

1824 Historical Society of Pennsylvania est.

1829 Delaware Canal completed.

1832 Germantown railroad completed.

1833 US Mint built.

1834 Alms house built at Blockley. Merchant's Exchange built on Walnut.

1836 Philadelphia Bank built.

1837 Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society est.

1835 Worker strike to get 10hr day.

1836 Philadelphia's Central High School is built.

1837 Edgar Allan Poe enters Philadelphia.

1839 St. Patrick's built.

1840 Large foundries and factories start est. With the Irish famine large masses of rural Irish immigrants flood the city. Anti Irish Catholic and anti Black (pro slavery) bias erupts for the 1840's. The Industrial Revolution begins as poverty escalates.

1843 Large riot against Irish Catholics occurs.

1844 Another large riot against Irish Catholics occurs.

1847 Philadelphia College of Medicine is est along with the American Medical Association.

1849 Cholera hits the city.

1850 Gangs start to show their faces.

1851 St. Joseph's College est.

1852 Smallpox hits.

1853 Several Streets change names High St to Market St, Mulberry to Arch, Sassatime to Race, Cedar to South. St. Peter's School est.

1855 Sanford Opera House est. Know Nothing Party est.

1861 Civil War begins.

1863 Battle of Gettysburg. Emancipation Proclamation. LaSalle College est.

1865 Abe Lincoln killed.

1866 Civil War ends.

1870 Synagogue of Congregation Rodeph Shalom built.

1873 Masonic Temple est.

1875 James Frederic Wood becomes first Roman Catholic archbishop of Philadelphia.

1876 Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts built.

1877 Museum of Art est.

1882 Pennsylvania Railroad Depot built.

1883 Phillies baseball team est.

1900 Large Italian immigrant increase.

1904 Bellevue-Stratford skyscraper built.

1905 Large Russian immigrant flood.
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1681 - 1907
225 yrs
old Philly

Current day photos are used to help the local resident or traveler (tourists) to envision the day of William Penn, Ben Franklin, George Washington, Abe Lincoln, Civil War and of course the American Revolution. Many immigrants influenced the growth and development of this city including the English, Irish, Germans, Italians, Russians, and Polish. The resources listed here are external to this site but can be helpful.