Roberts family
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Roberts family
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Roberts family
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"John Roberts came to the area of Pennsylvania called Merion [from his homeland in Wales] in November of 1683. In January 1684, John married Gaynor Roberts who was a fellow passenger on the sailing ship Morning Star. Their marriage was the first such ceremony performed at Merion Friends Meeting. Of the three men named John Roberts who came on the same voyage of the Morning Star, this John Roberts is called "The Maltster" for the crop he raised, barley for malt.
"John was pleased to discover well timbered land, a clear spring, plenty of stone for building and soil which was "good and fat." He called his farm "Pencoid", later spelled Pencoyd, which in Welsh means "head of the woods," an apt name because his large stone farmhouse was nestled at the top of the rise of land overlooking the Schuylkill River. His property extended from the Schuylkill River to Conshohocken State Road along City Avenue.
"The dynasty which he founded produced many civic leaders; a physician, a president of the Pennsylvania Railroad and a state senator. The industries that John Roberts' descendants started include a model dairy farm and an iron works." ("The Roberts Family Collection")
*Founder of Pencoyd: John Roberts, 1648 (Wales)-1724. *Second Proprietor of Pencoyd: Robert Roberts, 1685-1768. *Third Proprietor of Pencoyd: John Roberts, 1710-1776. *Fourth Proprietor of Pencoyd: Algernon Roberts, 1751-1815. *Fifth Proprietor of Pencoyd: Isaac Warner Roberts, 1789-1859. *Sixth Proprietor of Pencoyd: George Brooke Roberts, 1833-1897. *Seventh Proprietor of Pencoyd: T. Williams Roberts, 1877-1962.
George Brooke Roberts, 1833-1897, began working in the railroad industry in 1851. In 1880 he became president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, in which role he was influential in the development of the Main Line.
Bibliography:
Lower Merion Historical Society. "The Roberts Family Collection." March 2003. Accessed November 16, 2011. http://www.lowermerionhistory.org/roberts.
Lower Merion Historical Society. "The Pioneers." The First 300: The Amazing and Rich History of Lower Merion, ed. by Dick Jones. Ardmore, PA: Lower Merion Historical Society, 2000. Accessed November 16, 2011. http://lowermerionhistory.org/texts/first300/part03.html.
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Lower Merion (Pa. : Township)
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Bala-Cynwyd (Pa.)
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Main Line (Pa.)
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Montgomery County (Pa.)
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