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This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted January 31, 2025. [2] Map all ... 0.4 miles (0.64 km) north of Old Concord
The Harmony Society was founded in what is now Germany in 1785 by Johann Georg Rapp. Meeting with opposition from the dominant Lutheran Church, Rapp and his followers emigrated to North America, and purchased the land in Butler County where the community of 200 families founded Harmony in 1805.
Concord is an unincorporated community in Fannett Township, Franklin County, Pennsylvania, United States. [1] The community lies on the South side of Tuscarora Mountain, straddling Pennsylvania Route 75, and is 9.6 miles (15.4 km) south-southwest of East Waterford. Concord has a post office, with ZIP code 17217. [2] [3]
Harmony Township was formed in 1809 from parts of Willingborough (now Great Bend Twp) and New Milford Townships. The present-day Ararat, Oakland, Jackson, and Thompson Townships were later split from parts of Harmony Township. [4] The borough of Susquehanna Depot was created in 1853 from part of Harmony Township. [3]
Concord Friends Meetinghouse is a historic meeting house on Old Concord Road in Concordville, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. The meeting was first organized sometime before 1697, as the sixth Quaker meeting in what was then Chester County. In 1697 the meeting leased its current location for "one peppercorn yearly forever" from John Mendenhall. [2]
John Hannum was a successful farmer and tavern owner who was baptized by the former Quaker, George Keith, who was known to conduct services in the Hannum home in Concord. [ 1 ] St. John's Church was originally part of the St. Paul's Church in Chester, Pennsylvania parish along with St. Martin's Church in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania .
Harmony is a borough in Butler County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 890 at the 2010 census. [ 3 ] It is located approximately 30 miles (48 km) north of Pittsburgh .
In October, 1683 purchased the mill property from William Penn in Concord Township, about ten miles (16 km) northwest of the town of Chester. Newlin was a prominent citizen, serving on the province's governing body, the Provincial Council in 1686 and 1687, as a Justice of the Peace, and on the Courts of Chester County. [6] [7]