Pottstown Historical Society

Pottstown Historical Society Everyday is Throwback Thursday! We are open the 2nd and 4th Sundays of the month from 1pm-4pm.

Hi everyone, check out our new website at https://pottstownhistory.org/Thanks to Raymond Rose at https://cwtwebsites.com...
02/02/2025

Hi everyone, check out our new website at https://pottstownhistory.org/

Thanks to Raymond Rose at https://cwtwebsites.com/ for putting it together, and the volunteers to helped create the site. Please like and share, and we welcome those of you who are not already members to become members today!

Since 1936, Pottstown Historical Society has been forefront in preserving local history and a place to learn more about your community.

06/01/2024

In the last 10 years or so, the Friends of Edgewood Cemetery has done yeoman work in restoring and maintaining Pottstown’s Edgewood Cemetery. A priceless piece of the borough’s history the cemetery was abandoned and inexorably descending into ruin before this group stepped in and saved it. To draw the public to the cemetery the group is now performing programs highlighting some of the famous people buried there.
Their most recent production, “Women of Edgewood” was given on May 18. Anna Maria Jones was one of the ladies portrayed. As an example of successful women in Pottstown’s history, Jones, even though she isn’t buried in Edgewood, certainly belonged on the program.
Over the years I have written about spoke about her many times. This is her story.
Anna Maria Jones owned a thriving business on High Street more than a century before women would have the right to vote in this country.
Born in what is now Upper Pottsgrove Township May 22, 1753, Anna Maria was a daughter of Melchior Shaner, who immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1742.
For reasons now unknown she was living in Philadelphia where she met George Spangler. They were married April 17, 1775, just two days before fighting between Massachusetts militia and British infantry at Lexington and Concord marked the beginning of the Revolutionary War.
On September 26, 1777 the war came to the Spanglers as the British army occupied Philadelphia. Less than a year later, June 6, 1778, the occupation ended with the British marching back to New York City leaving behind people who were still loyal to the British crown.
The Revolution was America’s first civil war and, unlike the Civil War of 1861 – 1865, where combatants usually didn’t know each other, this one often pitted neighbor against neighbor. This poisonous atmosphere translated into serious trouble for those who backed the losing side.
This became apparent in Philadelphia, when in the wake of the British withdraw many of those who aided them were arrested. George Spangler was one of these unfortunates. Apparently, he had acted as a guide for British forces. This was enough to have him thrown into the old Walnut Street prison, where he was “loaded with irons.” At his trial Spangler was found guilty of treason and sentenced to be hung
The sentence was carried out August 14, 1778. He recorded in his almanac, “Am to Dye on Friday the 14th. God have mercy on me I humbly pray.”
Spangler’s ex*****on meant hardship and deprivation for his family. With her husband dead, Anna Maria Spangler was now responsible for their welfare; with no resources she asked for permission to leave Pennsylvania to go to New York, which was still under British control.
On arriving she petitioned the governor for aid, and her memorial stated that in the wake of her husband’s ex*****on “her goods were sold at public auction and herself and three children, and an aged mother [mother-in-law] were left with nothing.” The record then noted that “rations were ordered” for their relief.
After Spangler’s ex*****on that family changed their surname to Laub, the maiden name of Spangler’s mother, which was quickly anglicized to Leaf. Thus, the Leafs in Pottstown, are really Spanglers. It is a genealogist’s nightmare.
By 1781 she returned to Philadelphia and there married Englebert Mintzer, an inn keeper in the Northern Liberties. Eventually they bought a farm in Pottsgrove, that, since 1888, is now in Pottstown, east of Charlotte Street and north of Beech. They had three children, and Englebert Mintzer died in Pottsgrove Township February 24, 1791, aged 38 years.
Anna Maria married a third time to Amos Jones. It is known that he was in business in Pottstown, but left his wife and went to Baltimore. At some point he returned to the borough where he went into business with a partner, and his deserted wife had the pleasure of seeing that business fail.
The pleasure of seeing Jones go broke was probably extra sweet because she was successful. She owned property that had a 150-foot front on the south side of High Street. (That area includes the site of the Van Buskirk hardware store.) That, in addition to being her residence, also had an inn, which was a stage coach stop, and a dry goods store. Along with that parcel she owned property north of Beech Street, which was probably the farm she and her second husband had.
Anna Maria Jones died November 13, 1813 and was buried next to her son, Joseph, on that farm. In her will she donated about half an acre of ground for the first Catholic cemetery in Pottstown. Because there was no road leading to it she further stipulated that people would have the “liberty to pass and to go to and from the same at all times either to bury others and to see the graves of those who may be buried there.”
The cemetery was at the southeast corner of, what is now Evans Street and Lincoln Avenue. When the property was sold for development in the 1880s, the cemetery was decommissioned, and the bodies reburied in other locations. Anna Maria Jones’ body and her son, Joseph’s, were transferred by her grandson, Frederick Missimer, to his lot in the St. Aloysius Cemetery on East High Street.
Her gravestone is still there, but it is very difficult to read the inscription, which is “ANNA MARIA JJONES, Died Nov. 3, 1813. Aged 60 years, 5 months,

05/27/2024

Memorial Day 2024
I wrote this story in 2017 for the Mercury. On Memorial Day morning I bought a small American flag from veterans, members of the American Legion post in Sanatoga, who were collecting contributions at the WaWa on High St.

Walking back to the car with flag in hand, the question was “what to do with it?” It wasn’t until midway through a second glass of iced tea at the Ice House Restaurant that a light bulb lit up inside my head. Monday was Memorial Day, a holiday created in the aftermath of the Civil War to commemorate the hundreds of thousands of men who died in it. Just a few blocks up the street was the Pottstown Cemetery where more than 150 veterans of this war are buried. There an unmarked veteran’s grave could be found, and that would be the perfect spot for the tiny flag.

It didn’t take long to find one. Barely fifteen feet west of the, now unused, Charlotte Street gate is a family burial lot purchased by Thomas Jefferson Graham. On that lot is a modest monument with a square base topped by a square column, with the names of family members buried there Inscribed on its sides.

On the west face are carved the names of two of Graham’s sons, Eli and William, with their birth and death dates. However they aren’t buried there. The Graham brothers were killed in combat during the Civil War and are buried in Virginia.

Only thirteen months separated them in age. William was born Feb. 12, 1839 and Eli on St. Patrick’s Day, 1840. They were born in Warwick in Chester County, where their father was the director of the public schools in that township and adjoining Union Twp. In Berks Co.

Sometime before 1860 the brothers left their parents’ home and struck out on their own. Eli came to Pottstown where he began learning the miller’s trade at the mill of Henry Gable. (Gable owned the Pottstown roller mill on the west side of Hanover St. and lived in the house that stood on the north side of it. The house is gone, but the mill, now an apartment building, still stands.) William cannot be found in Pottstown in the 1860 census, but it seems unlikely that he was very far from Eli.

On Sept. 18, 1861 Eli and William enlisted in Pottstown in a volunteer infantry company that was going to serve for three years in the Civil War. That organization became Company A of the 53rd Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment, which would be commanded by Pottsgrove Township native, John Rutter Brooke.

The 53rd was attached to the Army of the Potomac. It was an outfit that, during the course of its four years fought in innumerable battles and skirmishes. To come out of the war unscathed as a member of that unit was miraculous.

Unfortunately, Eli Graham didn’t have an angel sitting on his shoulder. He has the melancholy distinction of being the first soldier from Pottstown killed in combat during the Civil War. He was shot dead on June 1, 1862 in the regiment’s first action, the Battle of Seven Pines, fought about seven miles east of the Confederate capital, Richmond.

His brother William wrote to his parents, “Poor Eli is dead and it is so lonesome without him, but it is God’s will and we must submit.” After Eli’s death, William performed one final service for him. He saw to it that Eli was properly buried and his grave well marked. In 1866 the United States government created a small national cemetery about eight miles east of Richmond, where Union dead from the Seven Pines battlefield were buried. If you walk through the neatly aligned rows of headstones it soon becomes apparent that most of the men buried there are “unknown.” But one of the few of the identified is Eli Graham because his brother made certain that after the battle he was buried in a well-marked grave.

Although mourning the loss of his brother, William continued soldering with the 53rd. During the next two years he survived many of the bloody battles fought between the Army of the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia and, at some point, promoted to the rank of sergeant.

As bad as that time had been, once the two armies went after each other again May 5, 1864 the fighting went on with scarcely as pause. On June 3, 1864, two years and two days and less than ten miles from where Eli fell, Sgt. William H. Graham was mortally wounded at the Battle of Cold Harbor. A rebel bullet severed the femoral artery in his left leg and he died soon after. Unfortunately no one marked his grave

The tombstone on the Graham lot had a Civil War soldier’s marker, which has, over the years, disappeared from time to time only to appear again. On Sat. morning it was missing Now, in its place, is a tiny American flag.

09/13/2023

The open house on September 23 and 24th is at a cost of $10 if paid prior to the dates. It will be a $12 fee which is per car on the dates. You can start at the Pottstown Historical Society, pay the fee and receive a receipt and map to all the participating societies. This is a great opportunity to see the various archival items that each society has in their collections for one low fee. Contact Dave at 610-323-9273 for any questions.

09/05/2023

The area historical societies are having an open house event on September 23 & 24. Everyone is invited 11am to 4pm on both days for people to come out and see what amazing local artifacts are in the different societies . For more information contact Dave at 610-323-9273.

09/05/2023

Our next general meeting of the Pottstown Historical Society will be held at the Red Horse Motor Club at Third & Hanover Sts. on September 18, 2023 at 7pm. Come out and enjoy their auto memorabilia. There will be a talk on Ludwick Motors and a short talk on how the club came to our community . Members are free and non-members will be charged $5.

07/18/2023

“too many of them require expensive renovations to bring them up to code, many people have been forced to abandon them and leave our downtowns filled with vacant buildings.”

06/30/2023

Our July 17th meeting at 6pm will be on site at the Levengood grist mill on Ironstone Creek. The owner has invited the society to come out and enjoy a visit. This mill is dated 1839 and has many interesting parts and objects collected by Jennifer. Comfortable footwear is required. All interested parties will meet at our building at 568 High St. at 5:30pm and we will car pool to the mill as parking is very limited. Non-members will be charged $5. Any questions call Dave at 610-323-9273.

05/03/2023

May 15th at 7pm our speaker will be Robert Wood who will tell us about Sanatoga Speedway. Started with midget racing in 1939 the race track went into stock car racing in the 1950's. Come out and hear the rest of the story of the race track that was in our back yard and thrilled thousands of local citizens. The program will be at our building at 568 High St. Everyone is welcome but non-members must pay a $5.00 fee. Come out for a good time and learn some local history.

04/15/2023

If you enjoy history and especially local history please come out to our society on Sunday April 23rd from 1-4 pm and look us over and think about joining our organization. It's exciting learning about the community you are living in. Our membership is very low at $25 a person and $30 a couple. Membership is what helps to keep our society running and keeping those memories alive.

03/14/2023

On Monday, March 20th, at 7pm, we will have our general meeting at 568 High St. Our speaker will be Master Broom Maker, John Warren. He has been crafting his trade for 50 years and will teach us the history of the broom, its materials and what it takes to produce one. So come out and let John sweep you off your feet.

01/13/2023

The Pottstown Historical Society will welcome Kourtney High, a Borough employee, as our guest speaker at our meeting on Monday, the 16th at 7pm in our building at 568 High St. If you don't make the borough meetings this is your chance to learn what is happening in our community. Kourtney administers the writing of grants for the town and also heads the Area Rapid Transit and Pottstown Municipal Airport and can answer your questions. This meeting is open to the public and if you have any questions call Dave at 610-323-9273.

Address

568 E High Street
Pottstown, PA
19464

Opening Hours

1pm - 4pm

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