7161 Camp Hill Rd
Fort Washington, PA 19034, USA

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Property Story Timeline

Preserving home history
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  • Marley Zielike

Scheetz Farm, 7161 Camp Hill Rd, Fort Washington, Montgomery County, PA

The Scheetz Farm is significant for its architecture and history, showing the evolution of a historic farm property in over two centuries of growth. The vernacular house on the property demonstrates an additive construction history with portions dating to the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The development of the property, especially the expansion of the house, reveals the agricultural and industrial prosperity of Montgomery Count in general and the Scheetz family in particular. The Scheetz family were prominent farmers, paper millers, public officials, and military veterans. The property achieved local prominence as the site of Scheetz paper mill, built in 1769 and destroyed in 1929. Other significant individuals associated with the property include Nicholas Scull Jr., Surveyor General of Pennsylvania from 1748 to 1761, who was born and raised on this land during the period of early settlement. Significant Revolutionary War events also took place on and adjacent to the property during the Whitemarsh Encampment of 1777.

Scheetz Farm, 7161 Camp Hill Rd, Fort Washington, Montgomery County, PA

The Scheetz Farm is significant for its architecture and history, showing the evolution of a historic farm property in over two centuries of growth. The vernacular house on the property demonstrates an additive construction history with portions dating to the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The development of the property, especially the expansion of the house, reveals the agricultural and industrial prosperity of Montgomery Count in general and the Scheetz family in particular. The Scheetz family were prominent farmers, paper millers, public officials, and military veterans. The property achieved local prominence as the site of Scheetz paper mill, built in 1769 and destroyed in 1929. Other significant individuals associated with the property include Nicholas Scull Jr., Surveyor General of Pennsylvania from 1748 to 1761, who was born and raised on this land during the period of early settlement. Significant Revolutionary War events also took place on and adjacent to the property during the Whitemarsh Encampment of 1777.

  • Marley Zielike

Scheetz Farm, House, 7161 Camp Hill Rd, Fort Washington, Montgomery County, PA

The Scheetz Farm is significant for its architecture and history. The vernacular house on the property demonstrates an additive construction history with portions dating to the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The original one-and-one-half-story portion of the house appears to date to the 1750s, representing a rare survival of a little known dwelling type from the Colonial period. Subsequent additions, all of them architecturally intact before recent decay, show a transition from traditional ethnic building techniques to nationally popular architectural trends. The additive character of the house reflects the growing agricultural and industrial prosperity of Montgomery County during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the local prominence of the Scheetz family, who were farmers, paper millers, public officials, and military veterans. The structure also conveys its more recent history as a dual occupancy residence, fulfilling the needs of both tenant farmers and suburban commuters.

Scheetz Farm, House, 7161 Camp Hill Rd, Fort Washington, Montgomery County, PA

The Scheetz Farm is significant for its architecture and history. The vernacular house on the property demonstrates an additive construction history with portions dating to the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The original one-and-one-half-story portion of the house appears to date to the 1750s, representing a rare survival of a little known dwelling type from the Colonial period. Subsequent additions, all of them architecturally intact before recent decay, show a transition from traditional ethnic building techniques to nationally popular architectural trends. The additive character of the house reflects the growing agricultural and industrial prosperity of Montgomery County during the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and the local prominence of the Scheetz family, who were farmers, paper millers, public officials, and military veterans. The structure also conveys its more recent history as a dual occupancy residence, fulfilling the needs of both tenant farmers and suburban commuters.

  • Marley Zielike

Scheetz Farm, Barn, 7161 Camp Hill Rd, Fort Washington, Montgomery County, PA

The barn is a contributing element of the Scheetz Farm, which is significant for its architecture and history. The barn is a remnant of a much larger barn complex that once stood on the property, reflecting the historical and architectural evolution of a farming and milling complex from the mid-eighteenth century through the early twentieth century.

Scheetz Farm, Barn, 7161 Camp Hill Rd, Fort Washington, Montgomery County, PA

The barn is a contributing element of the Scheetz Farm, which is significant for its architecture and history. The barn is a remnant of a much larger barn complex that once stood on the property, reflecting the historical and architectural evolution of a farming and milling complex from the mid-eighteenth century through the early twentieth century.

Property Story Timeline

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