Thomas McCall – Samuel Hance – John Merion House

The McCall-Hance-Merion House and farm complex was built c. 1776 and is on part of an original land grant of 200 acres from William Penn to John Beale. In 1742, Beale sold 125 acres to Thomas and Robert Gihen, and Thomas left his half of 62.5 acres to his wife Elizabeth in 1750. Elizabeth later married Thomas McCall, and they owned 125 acres in 1776. In 1787, their son George acquired 81.5 acres. George McCall sold the property to Moses Palmer in 1797. The 1798 Glass Tax describes the house as a stone and long one story house on the property at that time. In 1804, Moses Palmer sold 32.5 acres and the house to Jane Wigton, who then sold the property to Joel Hatton in 1814. Hatton sold the property to the Samuel Hance Family in 1828. In the early 1800s, the house was enlarged, ceilings raised to nine feet, four fireplaces built, and a rear addition and northeast wing built. In 1867, Samuel Hance, a founder of the Brandywine Summit Camp Meeting, sold 52 acres and house to John Merion. The property stayed with the Merion Family, of which the Concord Township Historical Society founder Virginia DeNenno descended from, for almost 100 years thereafter. The McCall-Hance-Merion House underwent extensive restorations in the latter half of the 20th century under the Chetty Family ownership, and became known locally as the Chetty Farm. The Chetty’s received a Historic Preservation Award from the Heritage Commission of Delaware County for their efforts in restoring the property. The Chetty’s also sold 8 acres of their property adjacent to the Bush Hill Farm township park to Concord Township in 2021 to preserve green space and add land to the park. The original house size was 5 x 20 feet, and had 2 stories. The house still uses the original three stone walls which face the northwest corner of the property. The stone barn on the property has been added on to many times. The very center is original, and was built around 1750. The stone silo was added c. 1860, which covers up the original entrance to the lower barn which had a rounded top and large stones outlining the doorway to allow carriages to enter and unload inside. The barn contains a milk house, box stalls, hay loft, and corncrib. A large rock with a cloven foot carved in the top center, believed to be a landmark guiding early people to the Delaware River, is also located on the property. This property is a private residence, and not open to the public. Concord Township Historic Resource #67

Thomas Newlin House

The Thomas Newlin House was built c. 1805 and sits on land part of the original 614 acres purchased by Nathaniel Newlin in 1704. Thomas Newlin was the great-grandson of the first Nathaniel Newlin and obtained 124 acres from Nathaniel III in 1766. Thomas Newlin built the present house in 1805. The Thomas Newlin House is a Georgian fieldstone farmhouse with an added Victorian crossable. A date stone was built into the third-floor peak of the house, marking the 1805 build year. The property also featured two tenant homes, a storehouse, two barns, wheelwright and blacksmith shops, and a springhouse. The farm was valued at $4,000 in the 1850 Agricultural Census. Thomas Newlin was a farmer and blacksmith by trade and operated his shop on the farm. He married Sarah Grubb, and together they had seven children. Their son John Newlin inherited the farm and was the father of prominent Concord Township Community member and local school teacher Beulah Newlin Pennington. Mrs. Pennington was a longtime supporter of the Concord Township Historical Society and gave CTHS many antique furniture, china, and photos from this home that can now be seen in our museum. This building is a private residence and is not open to the public. Concord Township Historic Resource #8

Reece Pyle House

The Reece Pyle House was built c. 1850 after John Miller sold 50 acres to Reece Pyle in 1843. The house is a stucco-over-stone farmhouse, and features two later additions built c. 1940. The house overlooks a spring and faces east. The springhouse located on the property was built much earlier, c. 1730. The land at that time was owned by Matthias Kerlin, and is associated with his ownership. Just below the springhouse on the opposite side of Featherbed Lane was a cotton factory. Reece Pyle was a farmer and merchant by trade, and is listed in 1825 as a merchant selling imported, foreign goods by the Upland Union and Delaware County Republican newspapers. Shopkeepers and merchants that sold foreign goods at this time were required to have a special license. Reece Pyle also served as the secretary of the school board in 1836, and served as part of the Concord Board of Common School Directors beginning in 1838. The house stayed within the Pyle Family until the 1890s, when Brinton J. Heyburn purchased 101 acres including the house. Brinton J. Heyburn served in the American Civil War as a private in the 124th Regiment, Company D. He served alongside many other familiar Concord family names in Harper’s Ferry, WV, and is mentioned in a collection of letters from John Palmer to his family detailing life in the army during the war. The house sold to David Mahoney in the late 1970s, who was a member of the singing pop quartet, “The Four Aces,” which was inducted int the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2001. Million-selling singles include “Tell Me Why,” “Three Coins in the Fountain,” “It’s No Sin,” and “Stranger in Paradise.” This house is a private residence, and not open to the public. Concord Township Historic Resource #69

John Beale – Joshua Perkins House aka “Smallbrook” or “Hillsborough”

The John Beale -Joshua Perkins House is a log and stone farmhouse built c. 1660 with later additions in 1906 and 1936. It is the oldest surviving building in Concord Township! The land (30 acres on the 200-acre Beale Grant) was purchased from the Lenni Lenape in 1652, with the papers signed with the thumbprint of the chief. Smallbrook is a 2.5-story, 3-bay single-pave log house with Swedish architectural design features. It contains a low ceiling, a corner fireplace, original hardware, glass, flooring and beams, and original enclosed winder stairs. The first map record of this property is from 1743, when the house was owned by Joshua Perkins and referred to as “Hillsborough.” Extensive restoration work was completed in 1936 by R. Brognard Okie, who was considered the dean of Pennsylvania colonial architecture and later commissioned to restore the Betsy Ross House and William Penn’s Pennsbury mansion. The house was owned by the Quigley Family from 1704 to the 1930s, then by the Sanborns, and then by the Hall Family in recent years. The Hall Family owned a Christmas tree farm on 17 acres and sold 14 of those acres to Concord Township to preserve open, green space. This house is a private residence and is not open to the public. Concord Township Historic Resource #68