Plumsteadville is a community in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. It is located within Plumstead Township at the intersection of Pennsylvania Route 611 (Easton Road) and Stump Road. Students in Plumsteadville attend Central Bucks School District.
Plumstead Township was formed shortly after 1700 by English Quakers who came to Pennsylvania to help fulfill William Penn's dream of a land of religious freedom. Plumstead Friends Meeting, founded in 1727, was the township's first religious establishment, but diversity soon followed. A German Mennonite church at Groveland was formed in 1806. Later settlements were Scottish and Irish, and eventually many of the township's inhabitants were of German extraction. Plumstead formed part of the border between areas primarily British and German in Bucks County.
In 1725, a petition was presented by a group of residents to the Bucks County Court, organizing Plumstead Township. Already, small villages had begun to grow around the township to support what was at first an agricultural community. With the much traveled highway from Philadelphia to Easton, today's Route 611, running in a north-south direction and another main road running east and west, Point Pleasant Pike/Ferry Road, business and industry began to evolve. There were inns, blacksmiths, a gristmill, general stores and a large carriage works.
Some of Plumstead's more famous residents were the Doan Gang, a group of outlaws reknowned in the area during the latter part of the 18th century.
Today, Plumstead Township is fortunate to have many of its farms still functioning and often by families that have owned them for generations.
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