![]() ![]() Lower Gwynedd Township is proposing roadway improvements to be located at the intersection of Sumneytown Pike/Norristown Road (SR 2052). The Spring House Intersection Improvement Project is being funded through a Multi-Modal Transportation Fund Grant. ![]() Welsh Road is now part of the 37.4-mile-long (60.2 km) Pennsylvania Route 63 (PA 63) which runs from Green Lane to I-95.Road Construction Project Updates Spring House Intersection Improvement Project Built to give Welsh settlers in Gwynedd and North Wales access to the Pennypack Mills in Moreland Township, the road was originally called Pemmapecka Road (the Indian name for Pennypack Creek) but was changed to Welsh Road in 1750 ![]() Welsh Road, the oldest thoroughfare in the area (circa 1712), divides Horsham and Gwynedd. Some Welsh property owners held parcels that overlapped between Gwynedd and Horsham. A first wave arrived in 1683 and settled in Lower Merion, Radnor and Haverford Townships, followed a few years later by settlement of a second “Welsh Tract” in an area they called Gwynedd (Welsh for "white" or "fair land"), which today encompasses both Upper and Lower Gwynedd. It was one of the earliest roads in the township.įrom Charles Harper Smith 99p8 Many of the area’s earliest settlers were Welsh Quakers. Welsh Road forms the southern border of Horsham Township and follows one of the parallels first laid out by Thomas Holme in his 1687 map of Pennsylvania. ![]()
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