Google
Web CambriaPenn.com

HOME
COMMUNITIES
ATTRACTIONS
RESOURCES
BUSINESS
SHOP-ONLINE



Carrolltown
Cresson
Ebensburg
Hastings
Johnstown
Nanty-Glo
Northern Cambria
Patton
Portage
Other Communities



 



CambriaPA.com Information:
Advertising
Contact Us





RSS FEED / SITE SYNDICATION

This site uses SharedRSS

To keep informed of new content as it is added, just right-click on the XML icon below and select 'copy link' -- then insert that link into your favorite RSS Aggregator.



Copyright © 2005 - 2008 by Andrew J. Morris

See Also:
Johnstown - BUSINESSES
Johnstown - RESOURCES
Johnstown - CHURCHES
Johnstown - SCHOOLS

Johnstown

Johnstown came into being in the year 1800 when an Amish farmer, Joseph Johns (or Schantz, a Dutch form of John) layed out the first village lots on property he had purchased in 1793. He had been living on the farm and improving it since 1794, and when he learned that a new county was about to be formed (Cambria County was formed in 1804) he established the village in hopes it would be chosen as the county seat. He named his new settlement Conemaugh Old Town.

It was a time of speculation in land, timber and mineral properties, so for the first few years the property changed hands often. Joseph Johns sold it to William Hartley and Dr. John Anderson in 1807 for $5,000. They sold to John Holliday in 1808. Holliday bulit an iron forge on Stonycreek, but abandoned it after a flood (Johnstown's first disaster) destroyed his equipment. Holliday sold the property to Peter Levergood in 1811 for $8,000. Levergood sold in 1813 to George Brenizer and Thomas Burell for $12,583, but they were unable to make the agreed upon payments, and Levergood bought the property back at a sheriff sale for $6.18! Levergood became the main developer of early Johnstown, keeping an interest in the property until he died in 1860.

The first public school was built in 1811 on a lot Joseph Johns set aside for that purpose -- today the location of Joseph Johns Junior High School. By 1813 there was a grist mill, a tannery and distillery in the town.

The first major commercial enterprise in the town was the shipping of iron. Pig iron was hauled by horses from the Juniata Valley, and stored in Conemaugh Old Town, or refined there into iron bars. Flat-boats and some keel boats were built, and when the spring floods raised the river the iron was shipped down to Pittsburgh.

Early growth was slow, the town had a population of about 50 in 1810 and around 200 in 1820. The town was incorporated as Conemaugh Borough in 1831. In 1834 the local council renamed the town Johnstown in honour of its founder.

The town finally began to experience major growth in the 1830s. The Pennsylvania Canal System was constructed, and Johnstown became one of the main towns on the route. As the name implies, the route was primarily canals and river systems, but over the Allegheny Mountains a short rail line was built to connect waterways, with one terminus at Johnstown. By 1850 the town's population was 1260.

In the 1850s Johnstown underwent a transformation from a transportation center to iron and steel manufacturing. The Pennsylvania Railroad was completed through the city in 1852, effectively making the canal system obsolete. That same year the Cambria Iron Company was founded, later absored into Bethlehem Steel Company.

In the 1860s, 70s and early 80s Johnstown saw continued growth. Another railroad came through town - the Baltimore and Ohio. The city streets were served by horse-drawn street cars, there was free mail service. Electricity, natural gas, water and telephone services were established.

Then, on May 31st, 1889, disaster struck. A poorly maintained dam on the South Fork gave way, and a great flood scoured the valley. Over 2,000 people were killed, and most of the town was utterly destroyed. It was the worst peace-time tragedy in American history to that time.

After the disaster, Johnstown and seven surrounding boroughs voted to consolidate into a single city. Gradually, the community rebuilt itself and grew into the thriving city that we see today.

But disaster was not done with the city. On St. Patrick's Day in 1936 another flood occurred. It was not on the scale of the 1889 tragedy, but several people were killed and the city sustained substantial damage. This spurred the development of an $8 million flood-control program, completed in 1943.

Clinton Street and St. John's Church, ca. 1910

Despite the flood-control efforts, another flood hit the city on July 20, 1977. A phenomenal amount of rain, 11.82 inches over a ten hour period, fell on the valley and surrounding mountains. The weather service said such rain would be once-in-a 5,000 to 10,000 year occurrence. This flood caused 78 deaths and over 200 million dollars worth of damage.

But Johnstown sprang back, as it always has. Today it is a vibrant city of over 20,000 persons.