Pennock E. Sharpless House

The Pennock E. Sharpless House is a Queen Anne Victorian mansion in the Ward Village neighborhood in Concord Township. Built in 1890, the house was home to Mr. Pennock E. Sharpless and his wife, Anne Phebe Bishop. P.E. Sharpless was the owner of the P.E. Sharpless Company — which had a creamery situated across Concord Road from this house — and was responsible for producing the ever-so popular Philadelphia cream cheese, among other various dairy products. The Sharpless Company was one of 5 commercial creameries in the United States to produce cream cheese during the turn of the 20th century. Mr. Sharpless sold his creamery to Kraft Company in 1924, and continued to live in this home until his death. The Pennock E. Sharpless House has been restored in recent years, with restoration work still ongoing. The P.E. Sharpless House won a 2023 Heritage Commission of Delaware County Preservation Award. We also have a P.E. Sharpless special exhibit at the Pierce-Willits House & Museum on display! Concord Township Historic Resource #108.

Lewis E. Buckley House

The Lewis E. Buckley House, also known as “Stonehurst,” is a Victorian Folk Farmhouse built in 1886 in the Ward Village neighborhood of Concord Township. Lewis Buckley was a general store owner and the Ward Village postmaster in the 1890s. He lived in the house until 1901 with his wife, 3 children (including 2 twin boys born in the house in December 1888), and a schoolteacher boarder. Mr. Buckley sold the home in 1901 to the Bishop family, headed by Mr. Jehu D. Bishop. Mr. Bishop was the brother-in-law to Pennock E. Sharpless, proprietor of the P.E. Sharpless Company, and Mr. Bishop was the foreman at the Sharpless plant in Ward. According to the verbal account of Mr. Bishop’s eldest daughter, Jehu was credited with bringing a man from Europe after the Spanish-American War that showed the P.E. Sharpless Company how to make cream cheese. Mr. Bishop also had a small mushroom growing company in the back of the property for a few years before he sold it to Jacob Styer in 1913. The Bishop Family were the longest residents at the property, and affectionately named the home “Stonehurst”after it’s distinct limestone foundation and first floor exterior walls. The home still contains many original elements, including original inlaid oak floors, stained glass transom windows, a decorated fireplace mantel, and an ornate hand-carved wooden staircase. Concord Township Historic Inventory Resource #107

Thomas McCall – Reese Pyle House

The McCall – Pyle House was built c. 1814 by Thomas McCall with an addition built in 1890. The house sits on an original 500 acre land grant to Dennis Rockford from his father in law Thomas Herriot. Herriot died at sea in 1682 while aboard William Penn’s ship. Thomas McCall purchased 17 1/4 acres from John Bale, and built the front portion of the current house. Reese Pyle purchased the property in 1831. Pyle increased his landholdings to 65 acres. The property stayed in the Pyle family until 1934. Mrs. Crawford Pyle, who owned the home from 1913 to 934, was strangely struck by lightening in 1921 while sitting in the home’s kitchen. She recovered from the event, but the house was slightly damaged. Ed and Susie Dowden purchased the home in 1973, and removed the exterior stucco in 1986. They also discovered a large, stone-lined ice house underneath the floor of the garage workshop. Also on the property is a barn, garage, and various outbuildings. This property is a private residence and not open to the public. Concord Township Historic Resource #86

Lewis Palmer House

The Lewis Palmer House, once known as “Wyndblough,” sits high on a hill on the eastern end of 100 acres originally purchased by Thomas Hall from George Strode in 1686. The stucco-over-stone house was built c. 1860 by Lewis Palmer, a descendant of the original Palmer family members that settled in Delaware County in 1685. Lewis Palmer was a farmer by trade, and applied progressive agricultural techniques on his farm. The Palmers were Quakers by faith, and were heavily invested in peace work and education. Lewis Palmer was a public school director for 6 years, and was responsible for the erection of many commodious school buildings within Concord Township. He was a charter member of the Delaware County Historical Society, member of the Delaware County Institute of Science, and director of the Famer’s Market of Chester. He was also responsible for publishing the Palmer-Trimble Genealogy, which included over 1,000 pages and 3,000 names at the time. The Lewis Palmer House and property was used as a farm for raising horses and dogs in later years, and now belongs to the Willcox Family. Concord Township Historic Resource #137