Whitehall Parkway
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The Whitehall Parkway is a 110-acre park situated near the center of
Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania Whitehall Township is a township with home rule status in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. The township's population was 26,738 as of the 2010 census. Whitehall Township is a suburb of Allentown in the Lehigh Valley metropolitan region, which h ...
in the Lehigh Valley region of eastern Pennsylvania. The parkway serves as a preserved green space in the center of the Township after the Township government acquired the property in 1990 and sought to preserve a mix of Whitehall's history, spanning from early settlers to recent cement and mining companies centered on the Coplay Creek, a tributary of the area's
Lehigh River The Lehigh River is a U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline dataThe National Map, accessed April 1, 2011 tributary of the Delaware River in eastern Pennsylvania. The river flows in a generally southward pat ...
.


History

The earliest recorded inhabitants of the land around the area now preserved by the Whitehall Parkway were the Lenni Lennape, a tribal nation native to the region. The Minsi, a subtribe of the Lenni Lenape had settled along the Lehigh river and were using the land for hunting and fishing when European settlers began to arrive to the Parkway area in the late 1600s and early 1700s. After William Penn, Pennsylvania's namesake, received a deed from then King Charles II of England indicating his rights to the
Province of Pennsylvania The Province of Pennsylvania, also known as the Pennsylvania Colony, was a British North American colony founded by William Penn after receiving a land grant from Charles II of England in 1681. The name Pennsylvania ("Penn's Woods") refers to W ...
, he instead sought to acquire land fairly from the local tribes, purchasing tracts of land over time from the tribes. However, following his death, his son Thomas insisted that his father had received a deed from Lenni Lenape chiefs granting as much land as a man could walk in 1.5 days. This deed was never seen in a signed form and remains controversial today. However, the walk commenced, and became known as the Walking Purchase, commencing on September 19, 1737, and resulting in the acquisition of land that is now part of Carbon,
Lehigh Lehigh may refer to: Places United States *Lehigh, Iowa *Lehigh, Kansas *Lehigh, Oklahoma *Lehigh, Barbour County, West Virginia *Lehigh, Wisconsin *Lehigh Acres, Florida *Lehigh Township (disambiguation) *Lehigh Valley, a region in eastern Penns ...
, Monroe, and
Northampton Northampton () is a market town and civil parish in the East Midlands of England, on the River Nene, north-west of London and south-east of Birmingham. The county town of Northamptonshire, Northampton is one of the largest towns in England; ...
counties. One week later, on September 26, 1737, Johan Georg Kern and Georg Friedrich Newhardt, two immigrants from the Palatinate regions of Southwestern Germany arrived to the area and acquired a deed to 406 acres of land on February 1, 1743, which the pair split evenly on November 30, 1744. This land included the area now known as the Whitehall Parkway. Newhardt soon sold his land to Adam Deshler, who erected the historic
Fort Deshler Fort Deshler, located near Egypt, Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, USA, was a French and Indian War era frontier fort established in 1760 to protect settlers from Indian attacks.Roberts ''et al'', page 111. The fort was near the location of what is ...
on the site in 1760. Local lore maintains that the Fort was staffed by soldiers who protected local citizen fleeing from an attack by the local Lenape tribes, though there is no immediate evidence indicating that the fort was staffed with military but may have been a place where the locals took refuge from the attacks. Kern later passed the land to his son, before it was sold to the cement companies that developed the land in that area.Roberts, Charles Rhoads; Rev. John Baer Stoudt; Rev. Thomas H. Krick; William J. Dietrich (1914). History of Lehigh County Pennsylvania and a Genealogical and Biographical Records of its Families 1. Lehigh Valley Publishing Company.


Current status

As of 2005, the Parkway was described in Township documents as located along "Church and Chestnut Streets," containing "an abandoned quarry, wetlands, floodplain, and the ruins of a late 19th -early 20th-century cement plant." The official Township website currently notes that site is connected to the local
Ironton Rail-Trail The Ironton Rail Trail is a rail trail that spans in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania. The trail was made from tracks of the defunct Ironton Railroad and includes a paved loop. The trail spreads across Whitehall Township, Coplay and North Whit ...
, referencing a former stretch of train tracks converted to recreational trails, and that it hosts an annual Civil War reenactment each June. Local media also notes that just off South Church Street, on the parkway's western edge, sits what is possible the second oldest caboose in existence belonging to the former Reading Railroad company.


References

{{coord, 40.671, -75.524, type:landmark_region:US-PA, display=title Parks in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania Tourist attractions in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania