The Union Fire Company, thought to be the first volunteer fire company in the world, was founded in Philadelphia in 1736 in response to Ben Franklin's campaign in the Pennsylvania Gazette.



Source: In Case of Fire.ushistory.org. Retrieved from www.ushistory.org/franklin/philadelphia/fire.htm

Philadelphia was the nation's first capital between 1790 and 1800.

Source: Booker, Janice L. Philly Firsts. Philadelphia: Camino Books, Inc. pg. 1. 974.811 B644P

The first paper mill was built by William Rittenhouse, Samuel Carpenter, Robert Turner, Thomas Tresse, and William Bradford in Germantown, PA in 1690.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.410, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The Philadelphia Athletics was founded in 1902 by Connie Mack. The team won the first night football game on November 21, 1902. They won 39-0 over Kanaweola AC at Elmira, NY. Both the Athletics and Pittsburgh claimed the championship title for that year, and the issue was never resolved.

Source: The Football Encyclopedia: The Complete History of Professional NFL Football from 1892 to the present, 1991, p.17, David S. Neft and Richard M. Cohen, 796.3326 N299f

The first Army-Navy game was held Nov. 29, 1890, at West Point, NY. Navy won, with the final score 24-0.

Source: What happened when, p. 381

On August 30, 1983 Guion (Guy) Stewart Bluford Jr. became the first African American to fly in space. He became a NASA astronaut in 1979 and flew four missions, logging over 688 hours in space. Bluford was born in Philadelphia on Nov. 22, 1942 and is a graduate of Overbrook Senior High School.



Source: Guion S. Bluford, Jr. jsc.nasa.gov. Retrieved from nasa.gov
The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2001, v.1 p. 615, Stanley Sadie, 780.3 N42G2

The first Automat was opened by Joseph Horn and Frank Hardart in Philadelphia in 1902. Customers could buy food directly from windowed compartments. The last Automat closed April 9, 1991, at 42nd St. and Third Ave. in New York City.

Source: Phila. Daily News, 4/11/91

The first National League game was played on April 22, 1876 in Philadelphia. The Boston Beaneaters defeated the Philadelphia Athletics 6-5; there were 18 hits and 18 errors.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 1/25/76

There is no documented evidence, but it is popularly believed that Pat Olivieri, who ran a hot-dog cart in South Philly, was cooking up some steak and onions and decided to make a sandwich out of it. Olivieri later opened Pat's King of Steaks.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 6/3/94

The TastyKake Company of Philadelphia introduced the first commercial snack cake in America in 1914.

Source: Phila. Daily News, 5/11/89

ENIAC, or Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer, is considered to have been the first general purpose electronic computer. It was built at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania in the 1940's.

Hazel Hemphill Brown was a Municipal Court judge from 1952 until 1974. She died Dec. 12, 1983.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 12/83?

Wanamaker's Department Store, which prided itself on selling anything which could be bought, sold an airplane in 1909.

Source: New York Times, 1/22/95

The first Groundhog Day, in which a groundhog predicts the coming of spring based on whether or not he sees his shadow, was held on Feb. 2, 1887.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 2/2/87

The first was Suburban Square in Ardmore, Pa., built by Frederick W. Dreher in 1928.



Source: Temple Review, Spring 1991

Edgar Allan Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" is believed to be the first detective story ever published. It appeared in Graham's Magazine in 1841. Poe lived in Philadelphia at the time of publication.

Source: Phila. Daily News, 9/17/91

The first World Series was played in Boston, MA and Pittsburgh, PA from October 1 to October 13, 1903. It was held between the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National League and the Boston Pilgrims of the American League. It was intended as a nine-game series and Boston won five games to three.

Source: Famous First Facts About Sports, 2001, p.21, Irene M. Franck and David M. Brownstone, 796 F8475f

Strawbridge & Clothier opened at 8th and Market Streets in Philadelphia on July 1, 1868. The store was sold by the Strawbridge and Clothier families to May Dept. Stores on July 15, 1996, and the name was changed to Strawbridge's.

Source: GI Vertical File--Philadelphia--Dept. stores

Wanamaker opened a menswear store on April 8, 1861, called Oak Hall. In May 1876 he moved it to 13th & Market Sts. and renamed it the Grand Depot. In 1877 the store was expanded and became a department store.

Source: GI Vertical File--Philadelphia--Dept. stores

The soft pretzel, a Philadelphia street tradition, was introduced in the early 1820s.

Source: Philadelphia Almanac and Citizen's Manual, 1995, p.87, Kenneth Finkel, 974.811 P53AA

Philadelphia confectioner Elizabeth Coane Goodfellow (1767-1851) gave America its first lemon meringue pie.

Source: Philadelphia Almanac and Citizen's Manual, 1995, p.87, Kenneth Finkel, 974.811 P53AA

In 1779 sailors dismantled ships, disrupted shipping, and caused a riot because they wanted wages to match prices seven times higher than the year before.

Source: Philadelphia Almanac and Citizen's Manual, 1995, p.116, Kenneth Finkel, 974.811 P53AA

The American Philosophical Society is America's oldest learned society. It was founded by Benjamin Franklin in 1743. American Philosophical Society Hall located at 105 S. 5th Street was built in 1789. The motto of the American Philosophical Society is Nullo Discrimine, which means We are Open to All.

Source: Philadelphia Almanac and Citizen's Manual, 1995, p.121, 145, Kenneth Finkel, 974.811 P53AA

The African Insurance Company, located at 159 Lombard Street in Philadelphia, was the first African American-owned insurance company in the United States. Its president was Joseph Randolph; treasurer, Carey Porter; and secretary, William Coleman.



Source: The African Insurance Company (1810-1813). www.blackpast.org. Retrieved from blackpast.org
Black Firsts, 2003, p.85, Jessie Carney Smith, 909.0496 Sm61b

Crystal Bird Fauset (1893-1965), of Philadelphia, was elected to the Pennsylvania state legislature in 1938. As a state representative, Fauset introduced nine bills and three amendments on issues concerning public health, housing, public relief, and working women. She also sponsored an amendment to the Pennsylvania Female Labor Law of 1913 to better protect women in the workplace.



Source: Crystal Bird Fauset Historical Marker. explorepahistory.com. Retrieved from explorepahistory.com
Black Firsts, 2003, p.262, Jessie Carney Smith, 909.0496 Sm61b

Ashmun Institute was founded in Chester County, PA by John Miller Dickey and his wife Sarah Emlen Cresson. It was chartered by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on April 24, 1854 "for the scientific, classical and theological education of colored youth of the male sex.” In 1866 it was re-named Lincoln University in honor of President Abraham Lincoln.



Source: History. lincoln.edu. Retrieved from lincoln.edu
Famous First Facts, 1997, p.174, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

Mother Bethel Church, founded in August 1794, was the first Methodist church in the North to be organized by African Americans. It was founded by Richard Allen, a former slave, at 6th and Lombard Street in Philadelphia.



Source: Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church. ushistory.org. Retrieved from ushistory.org
Famous First Facts, 1997, p.482, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first book to be entered for copyright in the United States was the Philadelphia Spelling Book arranged upon a plan entirely new, adapted to the capacities of children and designed as an immediate improvement in spelling and reading the English Language. It was registered on June 9, 1790 by the author, John Barry. It was printed in 1790 by Carey, Stewart, and Company in Philadelphia.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.316, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

Wallpaper was manufactured in 1739 by Plunket Fleeson of Philadelphia.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.288, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The Constitutional Convention met at Philadelphia from May 25, 1787 to September 17. The Constitution was signed at the conclusion of the Constitutional Convention. It began with fifty-five delegates, but only forty-one remained until the conclusion. Three delegates refused to sign.

Source: Famous First Facts About American Politics, 2001, p.81, Steven Anzovin, 973 An99f

Philadelphia was the first capital of the United States, from 1774-1776.

Source: Welcomat 7/10/91

The Centennial Exhibition was the International Exhibition which was held in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia. It opened on May 10, 1876 and was host to nearly 9 million visitors. It closed on November 10, 1876.



Source: Exhibition. freelibrary.org. Retrieved from freelibrary.org

The first zoo in U.S. was the Philadelphia Zoological Garden in Philadelphia. It was under the management of the Zoological Society of Philadelphia. The garden was opened to the public on July 1, 1874.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.15, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first Medical College in the United States was the College of the Philadelphia Department of Medicine, now the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, which was established in Philadelphia on May 3, 1765.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.191, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first session of Congress to meet in Philadelphia was the third session of the First Congress which was held from December 6, 1790 to March 3, 1791. Congress continued to meet in Philadelphia until May 14, 1800, the last day of the first session of the Sixth Congress.

Source: Famous First Facts About American Politics, 2001, p.79, Steven Anzovin, 973 An99f

The first flower show was held in June 1829 in Masonic Hall on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia. It was sponsored by the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.20-21, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P

The first American-made locomotive was built in Philadelphia in 1832 by Matthias Baldwin, who started the Baldwin Locomotive Works.

Source: Welcomat 7/10/91

The first Bank of the United States was sponsored by the Federalist Party and was chartered in Philadelphia on February 25, 1791.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.245, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The Philadelphia Contributionship for the Insurance of Houses from Loss by Fire was formed in 1752 in Philadelphia. It received its charter on February 20, 1768.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.306, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first U.S. Supreme Court sat in Philadelphia at 5th and Chestnut Sts. before it was moved to New York.

The first hospital in the United States was the Pennsylvania Hospital of Philadelphia. The permanent building opened on February 11, 1752. This was also the first hospital to give free treatment to the poor and offer humane treatment to the insane.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.334-335, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first legally designated University was the University of the State of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The original name of the institution was the College of Philadelphia. It was designated a university on November 27, 1779. Since 1791 it has been called the University of Pennsylvania.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.172, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

John Kay was the first child born in Philadelphia after its founding. He was born in 1682 at "Pennypot Landing", a cave on the northeast corner of Vine and Water.

Source: Bulletin Almanac and Yearbook, 1976, p.284, 917.481 B87 1976

The Philadelphia Dispensary was founded in Philadelphia on April 12, 1786 by Bishop William White.

Source: Welcomat 7/10/91

The Female Medical College of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia was founded in 1850. It changed its name to Woman's Medical College in 1867, and to the Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1970.



Source: Welcomat 7/10/91

The first or second daily newspaper in the United States, the Philadelphia Packet and Daily Advertiser, was published in Philadelphia. It first appeared as a daily on Sept. 21, 1784.

Source: Inge. Handbook of American Popular Culture. 1981, p.2.

The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts was founded in 1805 in Philadelphia.

Source: Welcomat 7/10/91

The American Association for the Advancement of Science was organized September 20, 1848 in Philadelphia.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.502, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The Library Company of Philadelphia is the first subscription, or social, library. It was founded in 1731 in Philadelphia by Benjamin Franklin and his friends.



Source: The Library Company. ushistory.org. Retrieved from www.ushistory.org/franklin/philadelphia/library.htm

The Society for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage was formed on April 14, 1775 in Philadelphia. The society was incorporated in 1789 as the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery and for the Relief of Free Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage and for Improving the Condition of the African Race.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.110, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The Lancaster turnpike was the first macadam road. It was 62 miles long and connected Philadelphia and Lancaster. Work began in 1793, and it was completed in December 1795.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.133, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P, and the PA Turnpike Website

The first sugar refinery was built in Philadelphia in 1783. It was located around 3rd and Vine Streets.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.107, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P

The first public telephone demonstration was in Philadelphia at the 1876 Centennial Exhibition. It later traveled as part of the "America's Smithsonian 150th" anniversary exhibition.



Source: timeline. freelibrary.org. Retrieved from https://libwww.freelibrary.org/collections/centennial/timeline

In December of 1750 Benjamin Franklin gathered a group of friends to partake of a turkey dinner after witnessing his execution of a turkey by electricity. Although he had done this successfully in his backyard, on this occasion Franklin erred and absorbed the shock himself, while the turkey escaped. But his account of the experiment in his book, Experiments and Observations on Electricity, led other chefs to try the technique, making him the father of electric cooking.



Source: Benjamin Franklin Tries to Electrocute a Turkey. masshist.org. Retrieved from www.masshist.org

The first U.S. Naval Yard was established in Philadelphia at Federal Street and the Delaware River in 1801. Before 1801 work had been done there for the government, but only in 1801 was it made a permanent drydock for the Navy.

Source: Welcomat 7/10/96

The first animated photograph projection before a theater audience was shown on February 5, 1870 at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia. Henry Renno Heyl used his phasmatrope, a converted projecting lantern in front of which was a revolving disc containing sixteen openings near the edge on which photographic plates were placed.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.391, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first full-length, all-talking picture was Warner Brothers' "Lights of New York," shown in Philadelphia at the Stanley Theater during the week of Aug. 20, 1928.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 11/8/47

Holy Redeemer at 10th & Vine Sts., Philadelphia was the first Roman Catholic church and school built specifically for a Chinese congregation in the United States. It was built in 1941.

Source: Phila. Daily News, 7/13/92

The Altoona Jaycees and the Altoona-Blair County Chamber of Commerce sponsored the first Miss Pennsylvania beauty pageant.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 6/13/87

The first steam-powered icebreaker was built in 1837 in Philadelphia, to keep traffic moving on the Delaware River. It was christened "City Ice boat No. 1".

Source: Phila. Daily News, 7/13/92

The Die Philadelphische Zeitung, a German newspaper and the first foreign language newspaper published in the U.S., was published by Benjamin Franklin on May 6, 1732.



Source: Chronicling America’s Historic German Newspapers. neh.gov. Retrieved from neh.gov

He spent it in Frankford, now a neighborhood of Philadelphia.

Source: WPEN radio trivia, 7/1/85

Officer John Donovan, who was shot and killed by Samuel Archer on Sept. 23, 1903.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 6/10/86

William Penn disembarked from the Welcome on October 28th, 1682, at what the Lenni Lenape called Coaquannock, and is now considered Front and Dock Streets.

Source: Philadelphia: The Fabulous City of Firsts, 1976, p.2, G. Don Fairbairn, 974.81 F15p

That would be Jack Jones, who in 1972 took over WCAU's evening newscast. In 1976 he moved to KYW-TV and then in 1979 to Chicago and WLS-TV. In 1984 he returned to KYW-TV where he stayed until his death in 1991 from pancreatic cancer.



Source: Jack Jones. broadcastpioneers.com. Retrieved from broadcastpioneers.com

Among the mechanical devices were typewriters, electric lamps, the Corliss Steam Engine , which provided power for the Exhibition, and Alexander Graham Bell's invention, which he publicly demonstrated for the first time, the telephone.



Source: tours. freelibrary.org. Retrieved from freelibrary.org/collections/centennial/tours

Ice cream soda is supposed to have been introduced by Robert M. Green in Philadelphia, PA, who added ice cream to plain soda water. The first demonstration of this beverage was made at the Semi-Centennial Celebration at the Franklin Institute in the summer of 1874.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.253, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first ferry to connect Camden and Philadelphia ran in 1681.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 11/3/97

The first United States flag was flown in 1775 by the Alfred, which was built in Philadelphia.

Source: Phila. Inquirer, 11/03/99

Brothers E. Irvine and Clarence Scott invented the roll of toilet paper in 1879.

Source: Temple Review, Spring 1991, p.24.

The oldest unaltered Lutheran Church in the United States is the Augustus Lutheran Church in Trappe, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1743.



Source: History. augustustrappe.org. Retrieved from augustustrappe.org

The Wistar Institute is the first biological research institute in the United States, which was founded in 1891. It is currently located at 3601 Spruce Street in Philadelphia.

Source: Bulletin Almanac and Yearbook, 1976, p.112, 917.481 B87 1976. See also the Wistar Institute website.

The Wissahickon Mill was built at the mouth of the Wissahickon in 1686.

Source: Klein. Fairmount Park. 1974, p.118.

In 1862 the Government issued demand notes that were nicknamed greenbacks. $5, $10 and $20 bills were issued.

Source: Fischer. Fast Answers to Common Questions. N.D., p.54.

The first mayor of Philadelphia was Humphrey Morrey who held the office when William Penn erected the Town and Borough of Philadelphia into a City by his charter of 1691. It is unknown how long he remained Mayor; however, it is not unlikely he held the office until 1701.

Source: Encyclopedia of Philadelphia, 1932, v.3, p.879, Joseph Jackson, 974.81 J13

The first directly elected Mayor of Philadelphia was John Swift for his second term in 1840. In the 1839 Act of June 21 the right was given to the people to elect the Mayor which previously had been chosen by the Common Council.

Source: Encyclopedia of Philadelphia, 1932, v.3, p.881, Joseph Jackson, 974.81 J13

The Free-Masons Magazine was published in Philadelphia in April 1811. It was edited by George Richards.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.322, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

The first coins made by the United States Mint in Philadelphia were one-cent and half-cent copper coins. They were authorized by Congress on April 2, 1792 and delivered to the treasurer in 1793.

Source: Famous First Facts About American Politics, 2001, p.115, Steven Anzovin, 973.03 D561o2

This Philadelphia-based newspaper was the first daily in the United States.

Source: Inge. Handbook of American Popular Culture. 1981, p.3-234.

The Roman Catholic Church of St. Mary's opened a parochial school in 1781, followed by Holy Trinity Church in 1784.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p. 291

John Neumann, Bishop of Philadelphia, started the first such system in the United States in 1852. During his tenure he built 80 schools as well as starting a central Diocesan Board of Education,

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin almanac, 1976, p. 291.

He said "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."



Source: Gatland. Illustrated Encyclopedia of Space Technology. 1989, p. 171.

It was in Titusville, Pennsylvania, where in August of 1859 a drill went down approx. 70 feet and hit oil.

Source: Fischer. Fast Answers to Common Questions. N.D., p.543.

At Christ Church in Philadelphia, between 1785 and 1789, the Episcopal Church in the United States was established. In 1789 the first meeting of the House of Bishops was held at Christ Church.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p.293

During the Revolutionary period, William White served as Chaplain to both the Continental Congress and to the United States Senate. He is buried in the Chancel of Christ Church.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p.293

The Swedes, who settled this area before Penn started his colony, settled in what they called Wiccaco, making it the oldest part of Philadelphia. Today, we think of it as Southwark in South Philadelphia.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p. 295

It was first read near what is now Independence Square and was then the Univ. of Penn., by John Nixon on July 8th, 1776. The Liberty Bell was rung, as a crowd of 8,000 went wild.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.1, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P

Betsy Ross, or Elizabeth Griscom Ross Ashburn Claypoole (1752-1836), was first buried in the Free Quaker Cemetery at 5th and Locust Streets in Philadelphia. When it was abandoned in 1857, she and her third husband were moved to Mount Moriah Cemetery at 62nd and Kingsessing Avenue. Near the end of 1975 her descendents got a court order to have her disinterred and reburied in the garden of her home at 239 Arch Street.

Source: Resting Places: The Burial Sites of Over 7,000 Famous Persons, 2001, p.319, Scott Wilson, 920.02 W697R

They held it in Philadelphia in 1856 at the Musical Fund Hall. There the Republicans nominated John Fremont and adopted a party platform.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.7, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P

Susan B. Anthony presented it in 1876 in Philadelphia. In order to call attention to it, she led a march of various suffrage organizations to the Centennial Exhibition, which was being held at the same time.



Source: Declaration of Rights of the Women of the United States.rutgers.edu.Retrieved from ecssba.rutgers.edu

The Jewish Publication Society of America was founded in 1845 in Philadelphia by Judge Mayer Sulzberger, Isaac Leeser, and Abraham Hart.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.73, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P

In 1832, Willis Eye Hospital was founded in Philadelphia. It was the first ophthalmology hospital in the country. Willis Eye Hospital played an important role in establishing ophthalmology as a separate medical specialty.

Source: Philly Firsts: The Famous, Infamous, and Quirky of the City of Brotherly Love, 1999, p.101, Janice L. Booker, 974.811 B644P

It was naturalist John Bartram's, started in Philadelphia in about 1728. Bartram traveled from New England to Florida collecting seeds and plants for cultivation and exchange with English botanists. He was named Royal Botanist in America by King George III. His house and the garden,  at 54th Street and Lindbergh Blvd., are open to the public



Source: Historic Bartram's Garden. ushistory.org. Retrieved from ushistory.org/tour/bartrams-garden.htm

On October 6, 1929 the Philadelphia Orchestra was the first orchestra to make a commercially sponsored radio broadcast. Leopold Stokowski was the conductor. Stokowski was also the conductor in 1937 when the orchestra performed for the motion picture The Big Broadcast. On March 21, 1948 Eugene Ormandy conducted the Philadelphia Orchestra on television. The broadcast on CBS was the first symphonic telecast.

Source: Those Fabulous Philadelphians: The Life and Times of a Great Orchestra, 1969, p.68, 74-75,146-147, Herbert Kupferberg, 785 P53ZK

It was founded in South Philadelphia in 1852 by Bishop John Newmann, and is called St. Magdalene de Pazzi Roman Catholic Church.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p 392

It was in Philadelphia, where in 1792 the shoemakers organized. In 1774 they reformed as the Federal Society of Journey Cordwainers, striking in 1799 for 10 weeks and negotiating the first labor contract with an employer.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p.411

The Frankford Ave. Bridge over Pennypacker Creek was built in 1697 by the people of Holmesburg. Part of the King's Highway between Philadelphia and New York, in 1803 it became part of the Frankford-Bristol Turnpike.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p.419

The first Savings Bank to receive money on a deposit was the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society in Philadelphia. It opened for business on December 2, 1816 and was chartered February 25, 1819.

Source: Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in American History, 1997, p.245, Joseph Nathan Kane, 031.02 K132F 5th ED

It was the PSFS Building, designed by George Howe and William Lecaze, and then constructed by the Philadelphia Saving Fund Society in 1932. Standing at 12th and Market Streets, it rose 36-stories high, and was topped by a lighted sign reading PSFS.



Source: PSFS Building. explorepahistory.com. Retrieved from explorepahistory.com

Laurel Hill Cemetery, located at 3822 Ridge Avenue in Philadelphia, was place on the National Register of Historic Places and designated a National Historic Landmark on August 5, 1998 thanks to the work of the Friends of the Laurel Hill Cemetery. The first American rural cemetery was founded in Cambridge, MA in 1831, and shortly after John Jay Smith and a group of investors wanted Philadelphia to have the second rural cemetery in America. They acquired land about four miles north of Philadelphia overlooking the Schuylkil River. In 1836 the group organized the Laurel Hill Cemetery Company, and John Notman was the designer of the cemetery. The Laurel Hill Cemetery now covers 95 acres.

Source: Philadelphia Graveyards and Cemeteries, 2003, p.21-23, Thomas H. Keels, 974.802 K248P, See also the National Historic Landmarks website.

In the 1740's a small group of Jews began holding services in private homes and eventually became Miveh Israel, the second-oldest surviving congregation in the US. Their first synagogue, on Cherry Alley between Third and Fourth Streets, was dedicated in September, 1782.The current synagogue opened in August, 1976 on 4th Street between Arch and Market.



Source: Our History.mikvehisrael.org.Retrieved from mikvehisrael.org

It was the stagecoach line run by James Boxall,which started in 1831 and ran along Chestnut Street between 2nd and 16th Streets.

Source: Philadelphia Bulletin Almanac, 1976, p.427

Christopher Sauer was originally a clockmaker, but in 1743 he opened a printing business in Germantown. He produced the first American German-language Bible.

Source: Philadelphia Almanac and Citizen's Manual, 1995, p.49, Kenneth Finkel, 974.811 P53AA

The Sparks Shot Tower was built to fill a need for lead shot created by the 1807 Embargo Act and was the first such tower erected in the US. In 1808 it began manufacturing lead shot for sporting purposes, and during the war of 1812 began supplying the military with lead shot. Molten lead was poured through screens at the top of the tower.The size of the holes in the screen determined the callibre of the shot. As the drops of hot lead fell they cooled and hardened into pellets. They went through the final cooling process in vats of water at the base of the tower. When the shot was cooled it was then screened, polished, sorted, and packed in the main building.



Source: Sparks Shot Tower. workshopoftheworld.com. Retrieved from workshopoftheworld.com/south_phila/sparks.html

The first ship built at the United States Naval Yard was the U.S.S. Franklin. It weighed 2,257 tons loaded with 74 guns. It launched in 1815

Source: Workshop of the World: A Selective Guide to the Industrial Archeology of Philadelphia, 1990, p.1:8, The Oliver Evans Chapter of The Society for Industrial Archeology, 900 W892o

Francis Daniel Pastorius, a wealthy aristocrat and lawyer, secured 5,700 acres six miles northwest of Philadelphia from William Penn. Pastorius and thirteen Quaker families from Krefeld, Germany settled along what would become known as Germantown Avenue.

Source: Workshop of the World: A Selective Guide to the Industrial Archeology of Philadelphia, 1990, p.3:3, The Oliver Evans Chapter of The Society for Industrial Archeology, 900 W892o

When Julian Abele ended his university studies, Horace Trumbauer, head of an architectural firm in Philadelphia, paid for Abele to travel to Paris to attend the prestigious school for four years. Abele then became chief designer at Trumbauer's firm.



Source: Black Architect Gave Shape to an Idea. infoweb.newsbank.com. http://infoweb.newsbank.com/resources/doc/nb/news/0EB293AE883BC79D?p=AWNB

In front of the African American Museum in Philadelphia is a statue of Crispus Attucks by Reginald Beauchamps. Attucks was an escaped slave who led protesters against British troops in Boston. He became the first casualty of the American Revolution when he was shot and killed in what became known as the Boston Massacre.



Source: Crispus Attucks. pbs.org. www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p24.html

Edmonia Lewis's statue "The Dying Cleopatra" was exhibited and lauded for its humanistic realism.



Source: The Death of Cleopatra. americanart.si.edu. americanart.si.edu/collections
Public Art in Philadelphia, 1992, p.49, Penny Balkin Bach, 709.7481 B122P

The city of Philadelphia was designed by William Penn (1644-1718) and first settled in 1681. Penn envisioned "a greene Country Towne, which will never be burnt, and allways be wholesome" that would prosper peacefully alongside native inhabitants and where all religions would be accepted.



Source: Pennsylvania (Founding). philadelphiaencyclopedia.org. Retrieved from philadelphiaencyclopedia.org/archive/pennsylvania-founding/

Philadelphia was the birthplace of the abolition movement. On February 18, 1688, Quakers in Germantown protested "traffic of Men-body." In 1775, Quaker activist, Anthony Benezet, called the first meeting of the nation's first antislavery organization, the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, and the Relief of Free Negroes. In 1787 Benjamin Franklin and Benjamin Rush joined the group and helped write its constitution. Franklin became its president and, in 1790, petitioned the U.S. congress to ban slavery.



Source: Founding of Pennsylvania Abolition Society. pbs.org. Retrived from: www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part3/3p249.html

The Charles Morris Price School, founded in 1924 by members of the Poor Richard Club.

Source: Lutz, Jack. The Poor Richard Club. Philadelphia: Poor Richard Club, 1953. pp. 65-67. 659.1 P792L

The original site was a camp called Coaquannock by the Lenni Lenapes, the Native American tribe indigenous to the area. It means "the grove of tall pines."

Source: Donehoo, Dr. George. A History of the Indian Villages and Place Names in Pennsylvania. Harrisburg: Telegraph Press, 1928. p. 30 974.8 D716I

They include Godey's Lady's Book, Graham's Magazine, Salmugundi, Sartain's Union Magazine, Ladies Home Journal and the Saturday Evening Post.

Source: Bussy, R. Kenneth. Philadelphia's Publishers and Printers: An Informal History. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Book Clinic, 1976. 070.509748 P53p