Mercer County PAGenWeb


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Transfer


Transfer is a small village on the Erie and Pittsburgh, and Atlantic and Great Western Railroads, and derives its name from the fact that three differently gauged roads meet at the point, and a large amount of freight is transferred from one to other.  Aside from the churches, already mentioned, the town contains a large school-house, a post-office, a hotel, two stores, and several well-constructed dwellings.

 

In 1797 or ’98, Robert McCord located two miles east of the present village of Transfer, and erected a rude log hut, in which his daughter (now Mrs. Thomas Gill) was born, in 1800.  McCord was of Irish descent, but American born.

 

Among other early residents, may be mentioned the McKnights and Gillespies, who 


settled near the present village of Transfer.

 

Churches. In 1824 or ’25, a small log church was erected by the Presbyterians at Transfer, and used for a number of years, when it was replaced by a more convenient union building, erected by the different Evangelical denominations.  Dissensions subsequently arose, and the Methodists signed over their interest to the Presbyterians, and it has since been know as a Presbyterian Church.  The Baptists built a church in the same village in the summer of 1876.

 

 

History of Mercer County, 1877, pages 62 and 64.

 

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