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A Concise History of North Coventry TownshipSubmitted by Spencer Claypoole, North Coventry Township Historical Commission The earliest inhabitants of North Coventry Township were the Lenni Lenape American Indians. It is felt that one of the township's earliest roads, Laurelwood Road, followed an Indian trail.
As the Penn family sold tracts, land speculators quickly carved up the township but most did not reside in Coventry. Land was warranted beginning in 1713 with some occupancy in the same year. Early documents refer to the township as 'the Forest.' On Chestnut Hill in the township's western forested section there are charcoal beds where charcoal was made for nearby iron furnaces. Samuel Nutt, a furnace owner, named the township, Coventry. Nutt lived in what is now South Coventry Township. The first township settler is believed to be the trapper and trader, Peter Bezalis. His cabin was located on the banks of the Schuylkill River opposite the mouth of the Manatawny Creek. There was a ford or river crossing at this juncture.
In 1719 the Schuylkill River became the dividing line between Chester and Philadelphia Counties. Two of the earliest landowners in North Coventry were the families of Martin Urner and Thomas Millard. Urner was a founder of the Coventry Church of the Brethren. The church, on Urner's property, built about 1724, is the oldest church of that denomination in continuous use in America. A second Church of the Brethren was built in Shenkel Valley in 1828 in the township's western part. The Millard property contained a mill and a ford. His land is now known as Laurel Locks. The two oldest dwellings in the township are believed to be the 1713 Shellbark House on Creek Road, in the vicinity of Laurel Locks, and a home on Cherry Lane with exposed logs in the framing. What makes North Coventry Township unique in Chester County from its earliest beginnings is that it was settled largely by families of German background. The older farmhouses reflect this Germanic heritage. About a third of the taxpayers mentioned in 1718 were residents of North Coventry. Other early families were those of Henry Goode, Michael Haldennan, Ulrich Langacre, Henry Shenkel, Hans Switzer, Jacob Thomas, Abraham Wanger, and Hans Woolf-Miller. In the village of Kenilworth the Swan Stagecoach Inn dates to 1744 or before. A historical milestone for the township was the opening of the Girard Reach of the Union Canal by the Schuylkill Navigation Company in 1824. Four and a half miles of the Girard Reach pass through North Coventry Township. A portion of the canal with a lock remains on the Laurel Locks Farm. In 1831 there were the beginnings of a canal village, known as Pottstown Landing, which took shape along Laurelwood Road at the Schuylkill River, carving lots from the Reiff and Wanger farms. This village is on the National Register of Historic Districts. It is the only village along the canal that owes its development to the canal industry. Another event of historic proportions occurred in the township in Shenkel Valley between the years 1837 and 1857. A rebellious religious group, never more than 35 members, took hold of a few farm families, including the Stubblebines, in the valley. These were the Battles Axes. So notorious was the sect's moral code, favoring nudity and cohabitation, that the name Free Love Valley has become synonymous with this area of the township.
During this unsettling period Rev. John Price who lived with his family at Laurel Locks was pastor of the Coventry Brethren Church. Two township buildings are said to be associated with the Underground Railroad movement of the 1850's: the Jerome Titlow barn at Cedarville Road and South Hanover Street (torn down in 2006) and the John Stubblebine farmhouse on St. Peter's Road.
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