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Wall House
Wall House 02.jpg
Richard Wall house in October 2018
Richard Wall house is located in Philadelphia
Richard Wall house
Location in Philadelphia
Location Wall Park Drive, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Area 1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built 1682
NRHP reference No. 79002302
Quick facts for kids
Significant dates
Added to NRHP June 28, 1979

The Richard Wall house is a historic home in Elkins Park, Pennsylvania, built in 1682. It was owned by the Wall family for 165 years. It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as Wall House and is also sometimes referred to as The Ivy.

The home has undergone several renovations, and a section of the basement wall is the only original remaining construction. It was the site of religious meetings and weddings, and among the earliest locations of Quaker worship in the United States. It is now a museum open to the public, and is located at Church Road and Wall Park Drive in Elkins Park.

History

Wall house rear
The Wall House from the rear
Mile marker at wall house
A mile marker on the Wall House grounds
Beehive oven and pump at wall house
A beehive oven and a water pump on the side porch of the Wall House

Richard Wall was a founder of Cheltenham Township, Pennsylvania. He arrived with William Penn's group of Quakers in 1682. He and fourteen others pooled their land purchases to create the township. They named the township for the main town in Gloucestershire, England, where they apparently originated.

The Wall family was joined in marriage by the Shoemaker family. The families owned a corn grist mill on Tacony Creek. Descendants of the Walls lived in the house until 1847, followed by the Bosler family.

In 1932, the township acquired the house and surrounding lands, which was named Wall Park. The house was rented from 1932 to 1979. In 1941, Harold C. Pike, the township manager, moved into the home and resided there until his death in 1978.

Since 1980, the house has been managed by the Cheltenham Township Historical Commission, which opened the museum and orientation center in 1993.

An original section of masonry wall can be seen in the current basement. The house was redesigned in 1730, 1760, and 1805. Later renovations added running water and electricity.

The permanent exhibits display elements of life over more than 200 years of residence. Highlights include a fully furnished and electrified 5-foot-tall (1.5 m) doll house created before 1920 and a collection of over 100 antique tools.

See also

  • List of the oldest buildings in Pennsylvania
  • List of the oldest buildings in the United States
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