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23. 1795 Lycoming 24. 1796 Greene 25. 1798 Wayne 26. 1800 Armstrong 27. 1800 Adams 28. 1800 Butler 29. 1800 Beaver 30. 1800 Centre 31. 1800 Crawford 32. 1800 Erie 33. 1800 Mercer 34. 1800 Venango 35. 1800 Warren 36. 1803 Indiana 37. 1804 Jefferson 38. 1804 McKean 39. 1804 Potter 40. 1804 Tioga 41. 1804 Cambria 42. 1804 Clearfield 43. 1810 Bradford 44. 1810 Susquehanna |
45. 1811 Schuylkill 46. 1812 Lehigh 47. 1813 Lebanon 48. 1813 Columbia 49. 1813 Union 50. 1814 Pike 51. 1820 Perry 52. 1821 Juniata 53. 1836 Monroe 54. 1839 Clarion 55. 1839 Clinton 56. 1842 Wyoming 57. 1843 Carbon 58. 1843 Elk 59. 1846 Blair 60. 1847 Sullivan 61. 1848 Forest 62. 1849 Lawrence 63. 1850 Fulton 64. 1850 Montour 65. 1855 Snyder 66. 1860 Cameron 67. 1878 Lackawana |
From the late J. Edgar Hilgendorf,
Berks County Recorder of Deeds:
At the time Berks County was erected as a separate County in 1752 there were only twenty original townships. These townships existed prior to 1752 when they were a part of Philadelphia and Lancaster Counties, and were included in the new county of Berks. At that time Berks County extended in a northwesterly direction, and some historians extend this territory to the New York State line.
On February 18, 1769, the Pennsylvania Assembly passed an act appointing three men “to settle and fix the boundary line dividing the counties of Lancaster, Cumberland and Berks, and between the counties of Berks and Northampton…” The vast additional territory to the northwest became Augusta Township, Berks County. On March 21, 1772, The General Assembly erected the county of Northumberland, so after just three years, one month and three days, Augusta Township, Berks County ceased to exist. In 1811, Schuylkill County was erected by the Pennsylvania Assembly and Berks lost five townships established after 1752. They were Pine Grove, Manheim, Brunswick, Norwegian and Mahantango.
There are now forty-four townships within the boundaries of Berks County. One of the twenty-four newer townships was a part of Chester County and was added to Berks in 1753, and the remaining twenty-three were created by subdividing some of the original twenty townships.
In order
to establish a new township after 1752, it was necessary to petition the Berks
County Court. The Court would then appoint a committee to “view and enquire
into the propriety of the establishment of a new township.” A date would be
set at which time the committee would report back to the Court. A decision would
then be made based on the findings of the committee. Because these were court
decisions, the records and reports came under the jurisdiction of the Clerk of
Quarter Sessions, now the Clerk of Courts.
The following list shows the original twenty townships existing at the time of the establishment of Berks County in 1752 and the other townships subdivided therefrom and the dates erected:
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From Philadelphia County: (East of the Schuylkill River) 1.
Albany 2.
Windsor 3. Maxatawny 4. Richmond 5.
Maidencreek 6.
Alsace 7. Amity 8.
Colebrookedale 9. Douglass 10. Exeter 1850 11.
Oley 12. Ruscombmanor |
From Lancaster County: (West of the Schuylkill River) 13. Bern 14. Bethel 15. Heidelberg 16. Tulpehocken 17. Brecknock 18. Caernarvon 19. Cumru 20. Robeson From Chester County
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From the Internet site About.com:
Though the Mason-Dixon Line is most commonly associated with the division between the northern and southern (free and slave, respectively) states during the 1800s and American Civil War-era, the line was delineated in the mid-1700s to settle a property dispute. The two surveyors who mapped the line, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, will always be known for their famous boundary.
In 1632, King Charles I of England gave the first Lord Baltimore, George Calvert, the colony of Maryland. Fifty years later, in 1682, King Charles II gave William Penn the territory to the north, which later became Pennsylvania. A year later, Charles II gave Penn land on the Delmarva Peninsula (the peninsula that includes the eastern portion of modern Maryland and all of Delaware).
The description of the boundaries in the grants to Calvert and Penn did not match and there was a great deal of confusion as to where the boundary (supposedly along 40° north) lay. The Calvert and Penn families took the matter to the British court and England's chief justice declared in 1750 that the boundary between southern Pennsylvania and northern Maryland should lie 15 miles south of Philadelphia. A decade later, the two families agreed on the compromise and set out to have the new boundary surveyed. Unfortunately, colonial surveyors were no match for the difficult job and two experts from England had to be recruited.
Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon arrived in Philadelphia in November 1763. Mason was an astronomer who had worked at the Royal Observatory at Greenwich and Dixon was a renowned surveyor. The two had worked together as a team prior to their assignment to the colonies.
After arriving in Philadelphia, their first task was to determine the exact absolute location of Philadelphia. From there, they began to survey the north-south line that divided the Delmarva Peninsula into the Calvert and Penn properties. Only after the Delmarva portion of the line had been completed did the duo move to mark the east-west running line between Pennsylvania and Maryland.
They precisely established the point fifteen miles south of Philadelphia and since the beginning of their line was west of Philadelphia, they had to begin their measurement to the east of the beginning of their line. They erected a limestone benchmark at their point of origin.
Travel and surveying in the rugged "west" was difficult and slow going. The surveyors had to deal with many different hazards, one of the most dangerous to the men being the indigenous Native Americans living in the region. The duo did have Native American guides although once the survey team reached a point 36 miles east of the end point of the boundary, their guides told them not to travel any farther. Hostile residents kept the survey from reaching its end goal. Thus, on October 9, 1767, almost four years after they began their surveying, the 233 mile-long Mason-Dixon had (almost) been completely surveyed.
Over fifty years later, the boundary between the two states came into the spotlight with the Missouri Compromise of 1820. The Compromise established a boundary between the slave states of the south and the free states of the north (however it's separation of Maryland and Delaware is a bit confusing since Delaware was a slave state that stayed in the Union). This boundary became referred to as the Mason-Dixon line because it began in the east along the Mason-Dixon line and headed westward to the Ohio River and along the Ohio to its mouth at the Mississippi River and then west along 36° 30' North.
This line was very symbolic in the minds of the people of the young nation struggling over slavery and the names of the two surveyors who created it will evermore be associated with that struggle and its geographic association.