Picture yourself on the Beaver plateau
in the year 1756, when it was a frontier wilderness and Indians
roamed the forest, while fur traders came to the mouth of the
Beaver River to ply their trade with the Native Americans.
Or imagine Beaver at the time it was incorporated as a town
in 1802, when there were only about 30 houses, four taverns
and a small courthouse. Think of Beaver as it may have been
at the coming of the 20th century, when the tenor of the town
was well-mannered, well-educated and well-heeled, and it was
earning the approbation of “Saint’s Rest.”
Imagine walking down the street and seeing some of the noted
personalities who made Beaver their home – Colonel Richard
P. Roberts, killed at the Battle of Gettysburg while leading
the 140th Pennsylvania Infantry … Senator Matthew S.
Quay, Chairman of the Republican National Committee in the
late 19th
century … coal merchant John F. Dravo, who played a major
role in the development of Ohio River transportation … Hon.
Daniel Agnew, Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court … and
many others. You might have seen such notable visitors as Meriwether
Lewis on the third day of his world-famous “Lewis and
Clark” expedition … George Rogers Clark, Commissioner
of the Treaty of Fort McIntosh, which opened all the western
U.S. territories to orderly settlement … and internationally-renowned
author Rudyard Kipling, pursuing both journalistic and romantic
interests among the townspeople.
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