CHAPTER XIX.
NEW BRITAIN —
HILLTOWN.
THE first European emigrants to the region of the upper
Neshaminy found it well watered and heavily timbered, the soil
fertile and easily cultivated, the scenery beautiful, the
surface diversified with hill and plain and valley. Its
solitudes were unknown and unbroken save by the Indians, or
perchance some adventurous hunter or surveyor. The adjoining
portions of Montgomery county were already marked by the
presence of civilization. The southern portions of Bucks had
been settled a generation previously, as with difficulty and
danger the advancing tide of emigration penetrated to the
head-waters of the Neshaminy. Southampton, Warminster, and the
lower part of Warrington were settled in the latter part of the
previous century, while Buckingharn and Solebury had become
comparatively thickly populated prior to 1705. Newtown and
Bristol were villages of some importance; the former had been
incorporated more than a quarter of a century, whilst the
eligibility of the latter as the county-seat of the future was
already under discussion before there was yet a European settler
within the present geographical boundaries of New Britain and
Hilltown.
It may be observed with regard to the colonization of these
and other townships in the western or northwestern part of Bucks
county that the route of the settlers was the course of the
Perkiomen and its numerous tributaries rather than the valley of
the Nesharniny. This was a more direct course, but the
nationality of the people induced its choice rather than that
consideration. The early immigration to the province was
composed principally of Friends, who found the Delaware a safe
and convenient highway to their prospective homes, and thus
peopled, almost to the exclusion of all others, the fertile
southern portion of the county. The first German emigrants
settled near Philadelphia, and those who followed extended this
settlement farther inland, preferring to be near those of their
own people; and thus, as the tidal wave of colonization advanced
toward the sources of the Perkiomen, northwestern Bucks county
was reached and speedily evinced the presence and industry of
the hard-working and patient German.
It was by a different people, however, that the first inroads
upon the unbroken forests of New Britain were made. A settlement
of Welsh Friends existed at Gwynedd at an early date; they were
followed, or perhaps accompanied, by others of the same
nationality, but with widely different religious views. The
latter were Welsh Baptists, and had become so numerous in the
townships of Gwynedd, Montgomery, and Hatfield (Montgomery
county), as to sustain a flourishing religious society in the
first quarter of the last century. The extension of this
settlement into Bucks county was not rapid. It has been said
that one Lewis Evan crossed the border as early as 1695, but
there is no satisfactory evidence to support this view. It would
seem that Simon Mathews and Simon Butler were among the first
Europeans to make New Britain their permanent homes. They
emigrated from Wales in 1712, landed at Philadelphia, settled
for a time in Chester county, and removed to Bucks at some time
between the year 1715 and 1732. Near the village of Chalfont
they built a mill (owned for many years by Philip Grove), and
operated it in partnership until 1753. This was one of the two
earliest mills in central Bucks county. Simon Butler was
prominently identified with the early history of New Britain; he
was a justice of the peace for many years, a surveyor of some
ability, and a man of excellent judgment. Prior to that
plenitude of lawyers which forms a distinctive feature of
society at the present day, a man who could write a deed, an
agreement, or an indenture was almost invaluable in any
community, and that Simon Butler was such a man is evident from
the frequency with which his name appears in old legal
documents. He died in 1764, a consistent member of the New
Britain Baptist church. Mr. Mathews did not rise to such
prominence in local affairs, but was quite successful as a
farmer and business man. He amassed considerable property,
principally real estate, and was the owner of a large tract of
land formerly included in that of the "Free Society of Traders."
The homestead of this family was owned by five generations of
his descendants. Several houses built by him or his children
remained intact for many years and appeared to have been
constructed with much care. The Mathews family is still
numerously represented.
Among other names of Welsh etymology, which appear in the
early settlement of New Britain, are those of James, Griffith,
Jenkins, Morris, and Matthias. Upon the death of Thomas
Stevenson in 1723, his executors disposed of one thousand acres
of his estate to John and Thomas James, father and son,
conjointly. It is recited in this deed that they had already
been living upon the land. From authentic records bearing upon
the subject it would seem that the original home of the family
was the peninsula of Pembrokeshire in South Wales. John James,
with a numerous family of sons, landed at Philadelphia in 1711,
and settled on the eastern border of Montgomery county, whence
he removed to newly acquired property on Pine run in 1719. All
of the family became large landed proprietors. John Matthias was
also a native of Pembrokeshire; he emigrated about the same time
as the James family, located at first near Line Lexington, but
subsequently followed the Jameses to New Britain. He is the
first progenitor of the numerous and highly respectable family
of that name in this county. Thomas Morgan purchased land from
Isaac James in 1731, and added his family name to that of the
Welshmen who preceded him. Owen Rowland removed to this county
in 1727 or 1728 from Delaware county, whither he had emigrated
from Wales some years previously. Those of that name in this
township are descended from Stephen Rowland, his fourth son, the
majority of his descendants having moved to the west, when that
term meant the distant portions of this state. Benjamin
Griffith, a native of Cardigan, Wales, and a resident of
Montgomery county in 1720, was the ancestor of those who bear
that name in this section. He was successively farmer, teacher,
and clergyman, and a man of more than ordinary intelligence and
intellectual ability.
The Free Society of Traders, formed in London in 1682,
received at an early date a grant for lands which comprised much
of the territory on the southern and eastern boundaries of New
Britain, and the adjacent portions of Doylestown and Warrington.
This tract was about two miles in width at a point where a line
crossing it would have passed through the village of New
Britain. Above this, adjoining Pine run on the north, and also
Iron hill, were the lands of Thomas Hudson, and west of this, a
tract of considerable area granted to Dennis Rotchford, April
23, 1683. No bounds were specified in the grant to Hudson, but
he was allowed to locate his tract in any part of the province
not previously occupied. He chose this section of country, and
after his land was resurveyed, it was found to interfere with
prior claims, and its area was thus reduced to four thousand
acres. Through his agent, William Biles, Hudson disposed of his
entire tract to five gentlemen, viz: William Lawrence, Joseph
Thorne, Samuel Thorne, John Tallman, and Benjamin Fields in
1691, all of whom were from Flushing, Queen’s county, Long
Island. The entire tract was again consolidated in 1719 and sold
to Thomas Stevenson, a prominent and influential citizen. The
"Long Eiland line" is referred to in old papers.
As originally constituted this township was about six and
one-half miles long, and four and one-half miles wide. It was
erected prior to 1728. No plot or description of the original
boundaries has been preserved, but it seems probable that it was
rectangular and oblong in shape, and much larger than at
present. Its former generous proportions were reduced in 1819 by
the excision of the southeastern corner in favor of Doylestown;
and a portion on the northern border of Warrington was also
added to that township in 1850, thus reducing New Britain to its
present limits. It comprises an area of ten thousand four
hundred acres. The population in 1880 was one thousand eight
hundred and eighty-four. There is reason to believe that it was
also called "North Britain" at an early period.
In this section, as elsewhere in rural communities, it is
sometimes difficult to accurately determine the time in which
villages came into existence. This has frequently required such
profound investigation as to baffle the most distinguished
chronologers. The evolution of a village from a cross-roads
tavern or store is seldom accomplished in one generation; but
the process is not utterly devoid of interest on that account.
The village of New Britain, situated at the intersection of the
old North Wales and Almshouse roads, was near the center of the
township a century ago, and not, as now, partially beyond its
limits. It is a well-established fact that it consisted of but
one house at that time, that of William Thomas, built some time
prior to 1760. A pottery was erected in 1807 by Ephraim Thomas,
and the village derived considerable importance from these two
establishments. The first post-office in New Britain township
was opened here in 1829 by Isaac W. James. The town comprises
about a score of dwellings, several business places, a railroad
station, and a Baptist church. New Galena is situated several
miles west of Doylestown, in the eastern part of the township.
It is supposed that a considerable deposit of lead ore exists in
the vicinity, but mining operations have never been conducted
with success. Chalfont, on the Doylestown branch of the North
Pennsylvania railroad, has developed into a town of considerable
business activity within recent years. It comprises about fifty
dwellings, a number of stores, two churches, and a population of
about two hundred. Large quantities of hay, flour, milk, and
produce are shipped from this place to Philadelphia. The
Neshaminy receives several branches near the village, and would
afford fine waterpower, but this has never been utilized save by
local mills. The earliest name by which the village was known
was Barndtville, from the village tavern-keeper’s name. A
post-office was established in 1843 under the name of
Whitehallville with William Stephens as postmaster. Upon the
opening of the railroad in 1856 this name was continued for a
time, but finally changed to Chalfont, which seems to meet with
general approbation and will probably be more permanent than its
predecessors. A place of that name in England is the
burial-place of William Penn. Washington Camp, Patriotic Order
Sons of America, No. 95, was instituted at Chalfont April 3,
1886, with Michael Martin, president, Wilson N. Delp,
vice-president, Nelson MacReynolds, secretary, Henry Groff,
treasurer. Line Lexington, at the intersection of the Bethlehem
and County-line roads, is situated in New Britain and Hilltown,
and in Hatfield, Montgomery county. This is quite an old town.
Not many decades ago, before the railroad had superseded the
stage-coach, this was an important point on the route from
Philadelphia to the Lehigh. The coaches in both directions
received fresh relays of horses here, and the passengers stopped
for dinner. But the glory of that time has departed. A village,
with a population of about three hundred, several stores and
local industries, post-office and tavern, constitute its present
status. Colmar station, on the North Pennsylvania railroad, is
about a mile distant. This place was so named from Colmar, in
Scandinavian history celebrated as the place where Norway,
Sweden, and Denmark were united under the government of Queen
Margaret in 1396. Colmar, Chalfont, and New Britain are the
three intermediate stations on the railroad between Lansdale and
Doylestown.
St. James Evangelical English Lutheran church was the first
religious society at Chalfont. The church building was erected
in 1857, previous to which Reverend John Hassler preached
occasionally in a school-house. Reverend P.M Rightmeyer was the
first regular pastor; Charles P. Whitecar assumed charge
February 19, 1871, was installed May 21, 1871, and resigned
December 1, 1872; R.F. Kingsley assumed charge January 1, 1874,
and resigned September 22, 1874; H.M. Bickel became pastor in
the autumn of 1874 and resigned in the following year; J.M.
Hartzell was a supply in 1876—77; B.B. Collins’ pastorate began
October 7, 1877, and ended October 2, 1881; J.A. Hackenberry
took charge January 1, 1882, and resigned March 18, 1883; E.S.
Morell, the present pastor, preached his first sermon in May,
1883. The membership is sixty. This is a mission church.
The Presbyterian church of Leidytown and Chalfont has become
such within the past year (1886). In 1840 pastor Hougan held a
prayer-meeting in the Hilltown church, thus introducing a new
feature in public worship. The new departure thus made
culminated in a protracted meeting conducted by Reverend John
Naille in 1852, which was strongly opposed by a numerous body of
his members. Formal action was taken requesting his removal,
when a member of the consistory proposed an amicable division of
the congregation, which was favorably considered by classis and
finally accomplished. The adherents of Mr. Naille forthwith
built a stone church edifice, which was dedicated in 1853.
Reverend N.S. Aller was pastor from 1854 to 1871. Nothing of
particular significance marked this period, except the gradual
introduction of Presbyterian forms of worship. Reverend J.M.
Hartzell was pastor from 1871 to 1885, during which time an
adjunct church was organized at Chalfont, and a chapel,
fifty-two by thirty-two feet, was built in 1877. Reverend F.F.
Christine was called as his successor in 1885, but resigned the
following year. The change to Presbyterianism has been merely
nominal, as in forms of worship and government it has been in
conformity with that denomination throughout its entire history.
Of the Mennonite church at Line Lexington and the Dunkard
church at Fountainville no definite information is available.
HILLTOWN was erected in 1722. "Hill township" and "Hilton"
were its common designations at that time, and the origin of the
name has been explained in various ways. "Hiltondale" was the
country residence of the Langhornes in England, and their wishes
were consulted in the matter. The people asked that the name
might be "Aberystruth" unless Justice "Lanom" thought otherwise,
and evidently he did. The original boundaries remain unchanged,
and the shape is that of a rectangle. It is one of the large
townships of the county. The surface is undulating, with a
well-defined slope from an elevated plateau about the center of
the township. Here are found the sources of the Perkiomen and
Neshaminy. Much has been said in praise of the fine prospect
commanded by this elevation.
The largest among the original land-holders were James Logan,
Jeremiah Langhorne, and the proprietaries. Logan and Langhorne
were conspicuous characters in colonial history. Israel
Pemberton was the original owner of the Logan tract, having
received it from William Penn in 1716. Langhorne’s Hilltown
lands were east of Perkasie manor.
One of the earliest and most distinguished representatives of
the Welsh nationality in Hilltown was Reverend William Thomas
(or, in deference to the custom of the period, "elder" instead
of reverend). He was born in 1678 at Llamvenarth, in
Monmouthshire, Wales, a county at a distance from the sea, but
adjacent to the English boundary. His family belonged to that
large element of the English social system known as the middle
classes. They were the owners of landed property of considerable
value, which enabled them to give their children educational
privileges not enjoyed by the poorer classes. Having disposed of
his patrimony upon the death of his parents, William Thomas
prepared to embark for America, whither the generous offers of
William Penn had attracted many of his countrymen. He was at
this time in the full vigor of early manhood, with a fair
education, a sufficient knowledge of mechanical pursuits to gain
a livelihood, and means to begin life in a new country with
every prospect of success.
Reverend Joseph Matthias thus narrates the misfortunes that
befell him at this time: "He, with his wife and first-born son,
named Thomas (then an infant), left their native country to come
to America. He agreed for a passage with a vessel lying at
Bristol, bound for Philadelphia. The value of his possessions
bid fair for him to become a land-holder to a large amount in
this country, with plenty of cash to enable him to build, stock,
and improve to advantage. His cash, some valuables, together
with all the clothing for himself and family, except what would
be necessary for their use for a few days, were all put on board
the vessel. The freight was not all on board nor the passengers
all ready, but a day was assigned on which they should sail. In
the interim he took his family to the country, intending to
return at or before the appointed day. They did return before
the time assigned, but found to their great grief that the
vessel had set sail, but was not yet out of sight. Pursuit was
made in some small craft, signals were hoisted and kept up, but
to no purpose. The vessel was lost sight of, and the family left
destitute. They agreed for and took passage on credit in the
first vessel bound for Philadelphia, where they arrived safely
on the 14th of February, 1712. Upon inquiry they found the
vessel in which their property had been deposited, but the
master of the ship had absconded, and it was in care and
possession of others. They had the mortification to see some of
their goods in possession and some of their wearing apparel on
the backs of those who had purchased them from the dishonest
master of the vessel, yet they were not able to recover
anything." Nevertheless, through the assistance of a family of
Watkins who had known them in their old home, the passage-money
was paid and William Thomas engaged at his trade of coopering in
Radnor township, Delaware county, continuing at this five years.
His industry and skill were at length successful. He had the
shrewdness, the judgment, and the enterprise of a successful
business man, and rapidly emerged from his poverty, paid his
debts, and with the accumulated savings of five years of toil,
looked around him for an opportunity to invest advantageously in
landed property. February 12, 1718, he purchased four hundred
and forty acres in Hilltown from Jeremiah Langhorne. It bordered
upon the county line a distance of one mile, and extended inland
a nearly equal distance, embracing a beautiful and fertile
valley, now divided into several farms. The tract was originally
part of one thousand acres granted to John Brock in 1681. It
seems probable that William Thomas took possession at once.
In the course of a few years he built a stone dwelling,
demolished in 1812, but the location is still indicated by a
slight depression in the meadow bank near Samuel Detweiler’s
house. Mr. Thomas’ worldly possessions continued to increase. In
1723 he purchased three hundred acres of land from James Logan,
who secured it from the Pembertons. His experience in
negotiating for this tract illustrates the social differences of
that time. Edward Mathews thus narrates the circumstances: "At
that period there was a much wider distinction between classes
than now, and Logan moved in a very different rank from the
farmer and mechanic. He was rather haughty and pompous and knew
not the rude-looking countryman, clad in coarse, homely garb,
who, on his way home from market, whither he had carried produce
on horseback, stopped at ‘Stenton’ to inquire the price of the
land. Logan surveyed Thomas at first rather critically, and
inquired whether he was able to pay for the land if he should
buy it. His reply was: ‘My name is William Thomas. Let me know
the price of the land. If that shall meet my approbation, I will
then refer thee to Mr. Langhorne for any particulars thee may
wish to know concerning me.’ The price, ninety pounds, was
named, and William was invited to call again. Meanwhile, Logan
had seen Langhorne, who, from former dealings with and knowledge
of Thomas, gave him a first-class character. At the next
interview the change in his demeanor was marked. With a smiling
countenance he informed Thomas that Langhorne had said that ‘if
he did not pay for the land, he would do so himself.’" His
landed possessions finally aggregated one thousand two hundred
and fifty-eight acres, nearly two square miles. He was the
father of seven children, and it is estimated that his
descendants at this time number several thousand.
Of the other Welsh families in Hilltown, those of Lewis,
Owen, Morris, and Lynn were the earliest, and are at present
most numerously represented. There was also another family of
Thomases, in no way related to the Reverend William. Lewis and
Evan Thomas were holders of large tracts of land in the
northwestern part of the township near Rieff’s corner, and
eastward from the village of Telford. They were wealthy and
aristocratic, and owned slaves prior to the revolution. The
family graveyard was situated on the Bethlehem turnpike a
half-mile above its divergence from the county line. It is said
that a number of slaves were buried here. The spot has long been
desecrated, and there is now nothing to indicate that it was
once the place of interment of an aristocratic family of
colonial times. Richard Thomas was the head of the family prior
to the revolution. His two sons, William and Evan, were tories
and joined the British army. The former was a captain, and the
latter recruited a troop of cavalry. He was present at the
skirmish with General Lacey’s troops, May 15, 1778, at Hatboro’.
It seems probable that Henry Lewis settled in Hilltown as early
as 1730; a mortgage is recorded against his property in 1742, so
that he must have been in the township prior to that time. There
were also a James Lewis and a Jeremiah Lewis; the former lived
near the Rockhill line, and the latter removed to Virginia
before the revolution. Griffith Owen is believed to have been
the first progenitor in Bucks county of the family that bears
his name. He emigrated from Wales in 1721, purchased about five
hundred acres of land in the southeastern middle portion of
Hilltown, pursued the occupation of surveying for many years,
and was a member of assembly a number of terms. His influential
position seems to have been of a character similar to that of
Simon Butler in New Britain. The Griffith family of Hilltown is
descended from Evan Griffith, the son of Howell Griffith, who
lived in Pembrokeshire, Wales. He sailed for America in 1704,
but was taken prisoner of war by the Spaniards, and did not
reach his destination for some years. He settled first in
Montgomery, but removed to Hilltown in 1726, and bought land of
Thomas Walmsley. His family consisted of ten children, and his
descendants are quite numerous. The number of Welsh families was
not large. They seem to have been prolific, and intermarried
principally among themselves. Hence, in the second or third
generation from the original settlers, the population had
increased considerably, but this cannot be attributed to the
influx of new colonists. There seems to have been a lack of
stability and tenacity about the Welsh. They were comparatively
intelligent and enterprising; but not inclined to devote the
best years of their lives to the task of securing a competency
from a soil not over-productive. Many yielded to the inducements
offered by other pursuits and engaged in merchandising or
manufacturing. Others emigrated west or south, and did again the
work their fathers had done in developing a new country. When
enterprise was synonymous with change, and conservatism with
retrogression, this wide-spread desire on the part of energetic
young or middle-aged men to seek their fortunes in other than
rural pursuits cannot be utterly condemned. But for every farm
that was offered for sale there was a purchaser, seldom a Welsh
purchaser, however. A new element in the population was rapidly
increasing in numbers and importance— the stolid, conservative,
tenacious Germans. They were descending from the north, from
Rockhill and Richland and Montgomery county, bringing customs,
social forms, ideas and manners, language, and religious views,
widely different from those of the people they supplanted. They
came to stay. In 1774 the German names among a list of taxables
in Hilltown numbered sixty-eight, the Welsh sixty, and other
nationalities fifteen; total, one hundred and forty-three. Their
population at the present time as against all other
nationalities is as twenty to one.
The villages of Hilltown wholly within its borders are
Leidytown, Mt. Pleasant, Fricks, Lawndale, and Blooming Glen,
while Dublin is partly in Bedminster and Grier’s Corners is
partly in Plumstead. Leidytown derives its name from Zachariah
Leidy, by whom it was laid off about forty years ago. The first
temperance hotel in the county was kept here by him with success
for a number of years. The population is estimated to be two
hundred and fifty. Frick’s post-office is located on the Line
Lexington and Hilltown turnpike, about a mile southwest from
Leidytown. Mt. Pleasant is a hamlet of twenty or more dwellings
on the same thoroughfare and about the same distance in the
opposite direction. The post-office is known as Hilltown, and
was established in 1817 with Elisha Lunn as postmaster. Blooming
Glen post-office is popularly known as Moyer’s store, and is
about equidistant from Perkasie and Dublin. Lawndale, formerly
known as Pennville, is a pleasantly located village on the
turnpike leading from Sellersville to Hatfield.
Of the churches of this township the oldest are those which
owe their inception to the early Welsh settlers. They were as a
class devoutly religious and almost unanimously adhered to the
Baptist faith. Fortunately for the continuance of these
denominational preferences, one of their number, William Thomas,
had been ordained as a minister before his departure from Wales,
and in the multitudinous duties of a pioneer settler he did not
suffer his convictions to lose that positiveness characteristic
of his race. He connected himself with the Montgomery Baptist
church, of which the Reverend Benjamin Griffith was pastor. The
place of worship was several miles from his home, and much
farther from those of others of his neighbors. They were present
at communion services of the Montgomery church, but the distance
debarred many from attending regularly upon its services. That
this difficulty might be obviated, occasional meetings were held
at private houses or in the open air. The population increased,
and the congregations in a corresponding ratio. That the
community might enjoy those opportunities of which it had been
so long deprived, the preacher resolved to supplement his
preaching with a house for worship. He built a meeting-house in
the year 1737 on the Bethlehem road. It is disputed whether it
was of stone or wood; in either case, the community probably
rendered assistance, although Mr. Thomas himself worked upon the
furniture of the interior, making the pulpit altar out of a
hollow gum-tree supported horizontally. It is said that the
people went to church here armed and ready to defend themselves;
that the preacher, before ascending the pulpit, deposited his
arms at its base and examined his powder; for this was a time of
real danger, when no foresight could determine at what time a
hostile band of savages might descend from the unexplored region
beyond the Blue mountains, leaving death and ruin in their rear.
The preacher’s knowledge was not merely theological, but
embraced military tactics as well. The original meeting-house
was replaced by a stone structure of more pretensions in 1771;
this second one, after having stood eighty-seven years, gave
place to the present brick church, built in 1858, very nearly
upon the same site as its predecessors. In the burial-ground
adjoining are the graves of several thousand persons, four or
five generations of the population having passed over to the
silent majority. One epitaph is here reproduced: "In memory of
William Thomas, Minister of the Gospel, who died October 6th,
1757, aged 79 years:
‘In yonder meeting-house I spent my breath;
Now silent, mouldering here, I lie in death
These silent lips shall wake, and yet declare
A dread amen to truths they published there.’
Quaint, unique, and appropriate; also, it is believed to have
been original,
as nothing similar has been found anywhere in England or this
country.
The wishes of the Reverend Mr. Thomas regarding "yonder
meeting-house" are thus expressed in his will: "I give and
bequeath unto the inhabitants of Hilltown, forever, the
meeting-house erected by myself, together with the graveyard in
which to bury their dead, and all others, far and near, black
and white. Such as are guilty of self-murder I only reject and
deny to be buried in my graveyard or in any part of my land. I
give liberty to the said inhabitants to enlarge the said
graveyard as much as occasion may demand, the same to be laid
out and bounded in the following manner: To begin at Henry
Lewis’ corner post, thence southeast somewhat farther than the
spring or well which belongeth already to the said meeting-house
35 perches; thence northeast 20 perches; thence northwest 35
perches to a white oak sapling by the great road; thence along
the said road southwest 20 perches to beginning, containing by
estimation four acres of land and some perches. I forbid any
timber to be cut on said lot for any use save to repair said
meeting-house, graveyard, etc. The said meeting-house and lot of
land as before described I give unto the inhabitants of said
township forever to bury their dead in, and to school their
children (I also allow others to send to school there), and to
perform Christian worship, but under the foregoing and following
directions and restrictions, viz: I allow all tolerated
ministers to preach funeral sermons either in the graveyard or
meeting-house, which they may like best. Papists and heretics I
reject and altogether deny them any grant. My will is that the
Baptists hold religious meetings in the said house as often as
they can; but not any one that deny the Nicene creed. I allow
the Presbyterians to preach in the said house, provided they
hold the Westminster confession of faith, likewise Independents.
But if it happens that any one of them will not swear allegiance
to a Protestant king, such I deny and disallow altogether.
Papists nor Moravians I allow not to preach in said house, nor
any other strangers let them appear ever so godly until they are
well known to be sound in the faith. My will is that catechising
children shall be kept up in the said meeting-house forever by
orthodox catechism, and in order that my will therein may be
observed, I do constitute and depute my five sons, Thomas, John,
Ephraim, Mannasseh, and William, to assist and take proper care
therein. I appoint Lewis Evans, junior, Nathaniel Griffith,
eldest son of Evan Griffith, and Jonathan Evans, all of the
township aforesaid, and further I direct and order them, and
every one of them in their wills to depute some honest religious
man in the room of each of them to answer the care and trust I
have reposed in them."
Notwithstanding the earnestness and energy with which Thomas
builded and preached, the Hilltown church during his long
ministry was merely an adjunct of Montgomery, nor did it become
a separate organization until nearly a quarter century after his
death. Reverend Benjamin Griffith died in 1768, thus leaving the
pastorate of the united churches vacant. John Thomas, a son of
Elder William, had been called to the ministry in 1749; he was
born in 1713 at Radnor, and had never enjoyed any educational
advantages nor received any special preparation for his work
save from his father, and consequently assumed the ministerial
functions at a disadvantage. He filled Mr. Griffith’s pulpit,
but not his place in the community. As he was generally
acceptable to his Hilltown parishioners, a separation became
inevitable. There were other and more potent causes for this,
however. In this, as in other sections of the country, the
revolutionary war engendered a wide difference of political
sentiment, and friction between the two principal parties
distracted every community. An act to test the feelings of the
people by requiring them to take the oath of allegiance passed
by congress brought matters to a crisis. Those who refused to
comply were forbidden to pass beyond the borders of their
respective counties— a provision which, in this case, debarred
the disaffected of Hilltown from attending church in Montgomery,
except by undergoing the indignity of arrest and detention. They
were arrested en masse on one occasion, taken before Justice
Evans, but acquitted on the ground that the meaning of the law
had been misconstrued. But the annoyances still continued; and
with the consent of the Montgomery church fifty-four of its
members living in Hilltown were constituted a separate
organization, November 28, 1781. Elder John Thomas continued as
its pastor eight years, and doubled its membership during this
period. He administered the rite of baptism for the last time in
June, 1786, and died October 31, 1790, from the effects of a
paralytic stroke. In March of the preceding year, his successor
had been chosen in the person of Reverend James McLaughlin, a
young man from the eastern shore of Maryland. His ministry of
fifteen years was quite successful. Reverend Joseph Matthias was
ordained as pastor in 1806, and continued in that capacity until
his death in 1851. The "upper end" church was built in 1750 upon
a lot given for that purpose by John Kelley. A second building
was erected in 1804, and a third in 1875. For various causes the
condition of this church in recent years has not been
prosperous, nor are its future prospects encouraging.
The German immigration followed the Welsh, and the origin of
their churches dates from a correspondingly later period. Three
denominations are represented— Lutheran, Reformed, and
Mennonite. St. Peter’s Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hilltown
first worshipped in a substantial stone building, forty by
forty-four feet, with galleries around three sides, and three
doors level with the ground, erected in 1805. For many years the
long-handled cloth collection-bags hung unused beside the
pulpit, though some of the present generation well remember the
tinkle of the bells on their lower border as the deacons with
becoming gravity passed them around. Among the names of the
earlier membership were Erdman, Wasser, Hartman, Bader, Schemel,
Triewig, Snyder, Eckert, Cope, Savacool, and Rohr. Reverend J.K.
Rebenack instructed and received into the church his first
catechetical class, numbering thirteen, in 1806. The next class,
thirty in number, were received June 7, 1812, by Reverend John
Wiand. Mr. Rebenack was the first pastor, and Mr. Wiand appears
to have remained but one year. Tradition says that a Mr. Mensch
was pastor for a time, but there is no record of his labors.
Reverend William B. Kemmerer took charge in March, 1829, and
served as pastor uninterruptedly until 1859, thirty years, in
connection with a field that embraced nearly the whole of this
county. Reverend F. Berkemeyer, the present incumbent, assumed
the pastoral care of this congregation in 1859. During a
ministry of twenty-seven years he has baptized three hundred and
fifty, and confirmed two hundred and ten persons; although in
regular connection with the Pennsylvania synod no written
constitution had ever been adopted by this congregation until
1868. The church building, situated about a mile and a half from
Line Lexington on the Bethlehem road, was built conjointly by
Lutheran and Reformed. A new stone church was built in 1875 upon
the site of the old basement; steeple, pulpit recess, bell, and
organ render it complete in all its appointments.
The Reformed congregation (St. Peter’s) was organized by
Reverend Jacob Senn, who preached his first sermon April 1,
1805. Reverend George Wack was the first pastor. He confirmed a
class of catechumens in 1810, of whom Henry Driesbach and Henry
Leidy were the last survivors. His pastorate continued until
1827, excepting 1820—21, when Reverend A.L. Dechant preached.
Successive pastoral changes from that time have been as follows:
1827—34, Henry Gerhart; 1834—39, Henry S. Bassler; 1840—42, J.M.
Hangen; 1843, George Wack; 1843, A. Beckey; 1845—52, J. Naille;
1852—58, A.L. Dechant; 1860—76, W.R. Yearick; 1877--, A.F.
Seiple.
The partition deed of 1735 opening the manor of Perkasie for
settlement was a strong inducement to Mennonite immigration.
Henry Funk and Christian Lederach arrived in 1747, John Funk in
1748, Andrew Godshall in 1752, Valentine Kratz in 1748, Hoopert
Kassel in 1758, those of the name of Moyer, High, Hunsberger,
Kulp, Rickert, and others at a later period. The Perkasie or
Hilltown Mennonite meeting-house was built in 1753 upon a small
lot on Henry Funk’s land, forty-four feet square in the rear
being reserved as a burial-ground. This was a log church about
as large as an old school-house. It stood for seventy years; it
was rebuilt in 1823 on an adjoining lot about seventy-five feet
from the original site; and this, sixty-nine years later, was
replaced by the substantial and commodious edifice that marks
its site. Among the first preachers were ----- Moyer, -----
Wismer, Jacob Hunsicker, and Jacob Hunsberger. The ministers
living at this time are Isaac Overholt, Abraham F. Moyer, Henry
B. Moyer, and Henry Rosenberger. Fifty or more years ago, Isaac
Detweiler first preached in this county as a minister of United
Brethren in Christ. A meeting-house was built by those of this
faith at Lawndale in Hilltown in 1883, although meetings had
been held in private houses since 1846. Henry Rosenberger and
Joseph Detweiler are the preachers.
Trinity Evangelical church, Montgomery circuit, Philadelphia
district, East Pennsylvania conference, numbers about fifty
members. The first church building in Hilltown was erected in
1843; the second, a neat brick structure with tower and bell,
was dedicated December 7, 1884, the corner-stone having been
laid August 10th previously. Messrs. John Albright, Christian
Sliefer, Elias Hecker, Abraham Gerhart, and Reverend J.S.
Newhart, pastor, constituted the building committee. Jacob
Albright, the founder of the Evangelical church, was a resident
of the vicinity for several years.
|