Where was York's first town hall?

| | Comments (0)

generalmiller.jpeg

Local American Revolution war vet Henry Miller became York's first chief burgess in 1787. York would not have a mayor until Daniel Noell was elected to the position when the borough became a city in 1887. As a leader in early responders the York Rifles, Miller is gesturing to a target on the side of building, touting his unit's marksmanship. This is one of a group of American Revolution panels occasionally displayed by the York County Heritage Trust. Background posts: York's Yankee Doudle went to Boston, York's mayors since 1887, Scores of American Revolution posts.

An e-mailer raised a good question:

"Where was the original Town Hall of York located in the 1700's?"

A quick answer is that York would not have needed a town hall until after 1787, when it became a borough with Henry Miller as chief burgess... .


For matters of community import before then, the York County Court House in the middle of the town's square was a primary meeting place.

I'm not sure the whereabouts of the borough's operations after 1787. Its officers might have met in the court house or the next-door State House, built in the 1790s to accommodate a growing county government. That would be a tough one to run down, but if anyone knows, please comment below.

York's present-day City Hall opened on the footprint of the former St. Paul's Lutheran Church. It had formerly been located on South Duke Street. In early 1942, a few months after city officials moved out, the South Duke Street building became a center for World War II rationing.

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.


Grazr



Follow me on Twitter

Powered by Movable Type 4.25

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jim McClure published on August 25, 2008 10:22 AM.

Birthday borough Dillsburg: 'Seems to be York County's wild child' was the previous entry in this blog.

For years, York countians have eyed amazing, destructive Susquehanna River ice jams is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.