Kendigtown

Plumstead Twp, Bucks County, PA

   

A Place of Some Importance ... [1]

The Ferry Road, beginning at Lower Black Eddy and winding through Gardenville, Danboro and Fountainville to Chalfont, is very old. North of Doylestown it was during Revolutionary times that the main artery of travel across Bucks County into New Jersey. Stranded in isolation along this road when traffic was later diverted to other newly-opened highways was a small group of houses which still bears the almost forgotten name of Kindytown. It is located in southwestern Plumstead Township between Danboro and Fountainville and in olden times was a place of some importance. The village was named for the Kendig family, once numerous and important in that part of Plumstead, but now almost entirely obsolete. Kendig was often locally pronounced Kindig and some members of the family so spelled it. The first part of the name Kindytown was simply another form of Kendig. The largest house, a plain stone building, has a datestone set in the west gable bearing the figures 1791. Not far from the village is the Johnson farm, once owned by Jacob B. Johnson, the contractor who in 1875 built Doylestown and Dublin Turnpike Road. Johnson was firmly convinced that galena ore was embedded under his farm in quantity that would warrant mining it. Only a couple of miles away, in the same valley of North Branch of the Neshaminy Creek, are the New Galena mines. With the aid of a companion who shared his faith, Johnson sank a number of shafts, ten feet square and thirty to fifty feet deep. The abandoned shafts are still to be seen. But no ore was found, though Johnson contended to the close of his life that he would have found ore if he could have commanded sufficient funds to sink his shafts deeper.

  1. MacReynolds, George, Place Names in Bucks County, Bucks County Historical Society, Doylestown, 1941

Nearby Neighborhoods

Street Names
Ferry Road • Gayman Road


HomeWhats NewSearch Contact

PrivacyDisclaimer • © 1997-2025 • The Gombach Group