Buildings at RittenhouseTown historic district. |
The RittenhouseTown Historic District encompasses the remains of an early industrial community which was the site of the first paper mill in British North America. The mill was built in 1690 by William Rittenhouse and his son Nicholas on the north bank of Paper Mill Run (Monoshone Creek) near (and now within) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The district, off Lincoln Drive near Wissahickon Avenue in Fairmount Park, includes six of up to forty-five original buildings. RittenhouseTown was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and was designated a National Historic Landmark District on April 27, 1992.
Flax was woven into linen in nearby Germantown.
When the linen fabrics wore out, the rags were brought to
RittenhouseTown to be made into paper. Paper produced at the Rittenhouse
mill was sold to printers in Germantown, Philadelphia, and New York City.
The Rittenhouse paper works operated until about the 1850s, by which
time the family was leasing its facilities out to other types of
manufacturing.
Between the years 1890 and 1917, the site was acquired through donations and purchases by the City of Philadelphia's Fairmount Park Commission. A nonprofit organization called Historic RittenhouseTown, Inc. was founded in 1984 to preserve, restore, and historically interpret RittenhouseTown. The organization maintains offices within RittenhouseTown and offers historic tours, paper making workshops and special events.
RittenhouseTown includes six historic buildings maintained by
Historic RittenhouseTown:
- Abraham Rittenhouse Home (c. 1720)
- Rittenhouse Homestead (1707)
- Rittenhouse Bake House (c. 1730)
- Enoch Rittenhouse Home (1845)
- Jacob Rittenhouse Home (1810) and another unnamed 18th century Rittenhouse Home.
- The Rittenhouse Bake House is used for cooking demonstrations.
Making paper on RittenhouseTown's campus.
Most of RittenhouseTown's buildings are built of stone and finished
in stucco, and generally exhibit colonial building methods. They are all
that are left of a much larger industrial complex and worker village,
of which more than thirty-five buildings have been demolished. The area
also includes archaeological industrial remains of some of the mill
buildings.
- Photos, exterior and interior, from 1989 and 1990 (NPS) 32 KB
- Historic RittenhouseTown website
- First Paper Mill in British North America
- Listing, photographs, and drawings of the Claus Rittenhouse house at the Historic American Buildings Survey
- Listing, photographs, and drawings of the Claus Rittenhouse home outbuilding at the Historic American Buildings Survey
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