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Elfreth's Alley

Coordinates:39°57′10″N75°08′33″W / 39.9528°N 75.1425°W /39.9528; -75.1425
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic street and neighborhood in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Elfreth's Alley
Elfreth’s Alley in theOld City section ofPhiladelphia in 2024
NamesakeJeremiah Elfreth
TypeAlley
Areaapprox. 40,000 square feet (3,700 m2)
LocationPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania, U.S.
Postal code19106
West endN. 2nd St
East endN. Front St
Other
Known for"Our nation's oldest residential street"
Websitewww.elfrethsalley.org
Elfreth's Alley Historic District
Elfreth's Alley is located in Philadelphia
Elfreth's Alley
Coordinates39°57′10″N75°08′33″W / 39.9528°N 75.1425°W /39.9528; -75.1425
Built1703 (founded)
1720–1836 (houses built)
Architectmultiple
NRHP reference No.66000681[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 9, 1960
Designated NHLDOctober 9, 1960

Elfreth's Alley is a historic street in theOld City neighborhood ofPhiladelphia, dating back to 1703.[2] The street has 32 houses, built between 1703 and 1836. The Elfreth's Alley Museum is located at #124 and 126.[2][3] The alley, aNational Historic Landmark, runs from NorthFront to North 2nd streets, parallelingArch and Quarry streets.

History

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Elfreth's Alley Museum in March 2012
The north side of the alley near N. 2nd Street in 2012

The alley itself was opened between 1702 and 1704 by mutual agreement between Arthur Wells and John Gilbert, both of whom lived on Front Street. Wells donated 5 feet of land extending from Front to Second Streets on the south side of the intended alley, while Gilbert, who owned the land on the north, donated 10 feet. Because Arthur Wells died shortly after the alley was paid out, it was first known asGilbert's Alley. Following his death, it came to be calledPreston's Alley, after Paul Preston, who had married Gilbert's widowed daughter-in-law. Not until about 1750 was it commonly called Elfreth's Alley, for Jeremiah Elfreth, a blacksmith who then lived on Second Street just north of the alley. His first wife was a sister of Paul Preston's wife, and his fifth wife was the widow of a grandson of Arthur Wells. Elfreth had acquired title, through these two wives, to land on both sides of the alley at its Second Street end.

Among the alley's residents weretradesmen and their families, includingshipwrights, silver and pewtersmiths,glassblowers, and furniture builders. During the 1770s, one-third of the households were headed by women. TheGeorgian andFederal-style houses andcobblestone pavement of the alley were common inPhiladelphia during this time. The houses are typically small, and many are uniquely PhiladelphianTrinity houses.[4]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, industry began to change the street. Perhaps the first change was a stove factory that took its place in a row of residential houses in 1868. Eventually, factories surrounded Elfreth's Alley. The city's waterfront was only a few blocks away. Industry changed more than the architecture; successive waves of immigrants, lured by the nearby jobs, moved onto the street. In 1900, the neighborhood was overwhelmingly Irish.

In 1934, the Elfreth's Alley Association (EAA) was founded to preserve the alley's historic structures while interpreting the street's history. The EAA helped save the street from demolition due toInterstate-95 construction in the late 1950s.[5] It also lobbied the city to restore the alley's name to "Elfreth's Alley"; it had been designated asthe 100 block of Cherry Street years before as part of a street-name simplification program.

Elfreth's Alley is today the product of cycles ofurban renewal and decay, andhistoric preservation efforts. The alley is a tourist attraction and a rare surviving example of 18th-century working-class housing stock. The site stands in sharp contrast to the more frequently preserved grand mansion houses of Philadelphia'sSociety Hill neighborhood.

Elfreth's Alley Museum

[edit]

Elfreth's Alley Museum, located in 124–126 Elfreth's Alley, preserves the 18th-century home of a pair of dressmakers. Restored to its appearance in the Colonial era, exhibits in the house and tour guides interpret the life of the house and alley's residents in that era.[6] Guides also discuss other houses on the alley and their inhabitants.

Holiday celebrations

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The Elfreth's Alley Association holds several holiday celebrations each year, whose proceeds support the upkeep and restoration of older homes.

For more than seventy years, Elfreth's Alley has celebrated "Fête Day" in early June, which celebrates the Alley's diverse ethnic heritage.[7][8] Residents open their private homes to the public, and are accompanied byhistorical reenactments and festivities. The Brandywine Heights High School Band and their Fife and Drum Corps perform 18th-century fife tunes as they parade through the alley.[9]

Sometime around the year 2000, Elfreth's Alley started holding "Deck the Alley" early every December, a self-guided tour of thirteen private homes festooned with Christmas and holiday decorations, and also includes caroling.[10] The Alley also hosts events forFourth of July,Oktoberfest, andHalloween.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^abHistorical marker on Elfreth's Alley
  3. ^Elfreth's Alley Association website. Other United States localities with three-century-old continuously inhabited homes includeSanta Fe, New Mexico; various pueblos; andSt. Augustine, Florida.
  4. ^Khederlan, Robert (December 14, 2017)."The history of Philadelphia's trinity houses".Curbed. Vox Media. RetrievedMarch 1, 2021.
  5. ^"Elfreth's Alley".Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. RetrievedNovember 26, 2023.
  6. ^"Museum". Elfreth's Alley Association. RetrievedDecember 21, 2014.
  7. ^Caroulis, Jon (July 4, 2023)."Elfreth's Alley Philadelphia: Living on the nation's oldest street — or one of them".Billy Penn at WHYY. RetrievedNovember 25, 2023.
  8. ^""75th Annual Fete Day- Tickets On Sale Now." Elfreth's Alley". Archived fromthe original on April 29, 2010. RetrievedApril 20, 2010.
  9. ^"Feteing Fifes."Concerned Parents of Brandywine Heights. 7 June 2006.[1]Archived 2010-07-26 at theWayback Machine
  10. ^"Yuletide Spirit on Elfreth's Alley". December 7, 2009.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toElfreth's Alley.
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