Monday, September 20, 2010

Historical Sketch of Chester

While we're on a Henry Graham Ashmead run we'll discuss his book, 'Historical Sketch on Chester'. Published in 1883 by the Historical Committee of the Penn Bi-Centennial Association of Chester, Ashmead describes the book as follows:

The Historical Committee of the Penn Bi-Centennial Association of Chester, in the discharge of the duties confided to them, thought it but fitting that the people should have some enduring memorial of the celebration in our city of the Two Hundredth anniversary of the landing of William Penn, the Founder of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania - a memorial which could pass from father to son and keep alive, to some extent at least the interest which the even aroused and the lessons it taught.I find it fitting to be sitting here, a great-grandson of a father who participated in the Penn Bi-Centennial, studying and writing about this book. Utah wouldn't be a state for another 13 years, I wouldn't be born for another 84 years and the internet wouldn't be invented for another 79 years. Yet Mr. Ashmead and the Historical Committee had the foresight to document the great history of the City of Chester so that someone like me could learn and write about its history.

William Penn first landed in America on October 27, 1682 in New Castle, Delaware. There he preformed a traditional turf and twig ceremony. A turf and twig ceremony was an English common law, to convey property. The common law in those jurisdictions once provided that a valid conveyance of a fee interest in land required the physical transfer by the seller to the buyer, in the presence of witnesses, of a piece of the ground, a twig, key, or other symbol. Two days later he landed in Upland, Pennsylvania and promptly renamed it Chester.

Two hundred years later the members of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and the Penn Club to mark the 200th anniversary of the landing erected a granite monument, standing about five feet tall and has Penn's coat of arms on the side facing inland. The site is now about 100 feet inland, with railroad tracks separating it from the Delaware River in an industrial section of Chester, just south of Chester Creek.

This book in particular has several unique features that any book collector would admire. Ashmead inscribed it to its owner Amos C. Brinton and the book plate indicates it was donated at one point to the Chester County Historical Society by Bart Anderson. Bart Anderson is the famous Delaware/Chester county historian. Two great signatures in one!

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