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A Little History | Churches & Cemeteries

Information for Family Historians: Franklin Township, Allegheny County

 

The land that is Franklin Park Borough (formerly Franklin Township) was originally part of Pitt Township. It was then included in early Pine Township and was part of Ohio Township when Ohio seceded from Pine in 1803.  At the time, Ohio Township extended nine miles along the Ohio River and northward to the Butler County Line.  Twenty years later, Franklin Township was the first of several communities to secede from Ohio Township.  What is today Marshall Township and Bradford Woods Borough was then part of Franklin Township.  Not until 1863 did Marshall split from Franklin.  Bradford Woods was created from Marshall in 1915.  Franklin Township remained a second-class township until 1961 when it became the Borough of Franklin Park.

 

Throughout most of its history, Franklin moved forward at its own unhurried pace. There were no towns or business districts. Churches, schools, blacksmith shops, and country stores were scattered among farmlands. Throughout the later 1800s and into the early decades of the 20th century the township had a thriving oil and gas industry.

 

By the end of the Great Depression, farming declined as a livelihood because men were taking better paying jobs in the mills of Pittsburgh, Ambridge, and Coraopolis.  The first subdivisions appeared following World War II and with increased population came the demand for public services.  Water and sewer lines, zoning, building codes, and a police force were needed.  With growing numbers of Baby Boomers came the need for a high school and the North Allegheny School District was created in 1948. 

 

The opening of Interstates 79 and 279 brought even more changes and challenges to this once rural community. Today, Franklin Park is a suburban Pittsburgh community of approximately 13,000 residents located in the northwestern corner of Allegheny County and is served by the Wexford 15090, Pittsburgh 15237, and Sewickley 15143 post offices. To learn more about the history and people of Franklin Township/Franklin Park, read Franklin Park Stories (2006) now in its third printing. The 233 paged hardbound book sells for $20 and is available at the Franklin Park Municipal Building 2344 West Ingomar Road Pittsburgh, PA 15237. Add $6 for postage and handling. Make checks payable to “Franklin Park Borough”. 

 

 

 

 

Early Franklin Park Churches & Cemeteries

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The first documented church in Franklin Park is Fairmount Presbyterian, dating from 1822. Known as the Duff Mill Congregation, it once shared a minister with Sewickley Presbyterian. In 1982, the congregation transferred its membership from the United Presbyterians to the Associate Reformed Presbyterians. Sessions records are archived at the Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia, PA. The church cemetery remains in active use with the earliest burials dating from the 1820s. Located next to the church and cemetery was the Fairmount School, which closed when the Franklin Township Consolidated School opened. The church and cemetery are located at 2535 Fairmount Church Road, but the mailing address is 2383 Wharrey Drive Sewickley, PA 15143.

 

Little Hill Methodist also dates from the early 1800s and was once known as Mount Union United Brethren in Christ. The oldest cemetery marker dates from 1829. Three sanctuaries have stood on this site with the present building having been constructed in 1894. At one time, it was also known as Creese’s Church of the United Brethren in honor of the pioneering Creese family who provided the land on which the church and cemetery were built. The church and cemetery are located at 2350 Magee Road, but the mailing address is Box 56 Sewickley, PA 15143.

 

The Little Log Church at Pine Creek was constructed in 1837 along the old Kuskusky Path on the boundary of what is now Franklin Park and McCandless. The Franklin Methodist Church grew into what is now known as the Ingomar United Methodist Church located at 1500 West Ingomar Road Pittsburgh, PA 15237.

 

Brandt’s Church was organized in 1845 making it the fourth oldest Lutheran Church in Allegheny County. The original log structure was dedicated in 1847. Today, Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church stands along Brandt School Road in the Wexford section of Franklin Park. Church and cemetery records are available in the church office at 2500 Brandt School Road Wexford, PA 15090.

 

Hopkins Chapel, once known as Ingrams after the family who donated the land on which it was built, once stood on Hopkins Church Road on the Franklin Park / Bell Acres boundary. The deed was recorded in 1849, but because of dwindling membership, this Methodist congregation ceased to exist by the 1920s. The site of the former chapel and cemetery has been heavily vandalized and has reverted to a natural state on a bluff above the Big Sewickley Creek. Church and cemetery records have not yet been located.

 

The Regular Baptist Church of Franklin Township was organized in1852, but it wasn’t until 1873 that the first baptism and wedding took place in the new sanctuary built along what is now Nicholson Road. Many current members of the Franklin Park Baptist Church are descended from the church’s founders. A small cemetery adjoins the sanctuary. Records are available in the church office at 2470 Nicholson Road Sewickley, PA 15143.

 

The Tree of Life Congregation of Pittsburgh opened a memorial park in 1948 along Reis Run Road that is still being used.

 

There are several newer churches in Franklin Park dating from the mid to late twentieth century, but none have cemeteries. They are: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Heritage Presbyterian, New Heights Church of God, North Hills Missionary Alliance, Orchard Hill, Saint Brendan’s Episcopal, Saint John Neumann Roman Catholic, Saints John and Paul Roman Catholic, and the Unitarian-Universalist Church.

 

 

The FRANKLIN PARK HISTORY OFFICE is located in the

Franklin Park Municipal Building

2344 West Ingomar Road Pittsburgh, PA 15237

and is open most days Monday – Friday.

Phone 412 364-4115 Ext. 309 or fphistory@franklinparkborough.us

 

 

© Franklin Park Borough