Easton
Pennsylvania
Easton: Northampton County Courthouse
Easton, city, seat (1752) of Northampton county, eastern Pennsylvania, U.S. It lies at the confluence of the Lehigh and Delaware rivers (bridged to Phillipsburg, New Jersey) and is part of the Lehigh Valley industrial complex that includes Allentown, Bethlehem, and Wilson.
Easton was laid out in 1752 by William Parsons, at the request of Thomas Penn, on land obtained from the Delaware Indians in the notorious Walking Purchase of 1737, a treaty that enforced Indian resettlement. The town was named for the English estate (Easton) of Penn’s father-in-law, Thomas Fermor, 1st earl of Pomfret. During the French and Indian Wars, Easton was the scene of several Indian peace councils; it served as an outpost during the American Revolution, and the Declaration of Independence was read on July 8, 1776, from the steps of the Old Courthouse (a marker in the city’s “Great Square” recalls the occasion). In 1829 the Lehigh Canal from Mauch Chunk (now Jim Thorpe) to Easton was opened, and Easton developed as a shipping centre for coal.
The surrounding area is rich in natural resources—farmland, limestone, slate, iron ore, and timber. The company Binney & Smith Inc. established a factory in Easton at the beginning of the 20th century to make slate pencils but quickly began manufacturing crayons; its world-famous Crayola crayons are still made there. Other factories in the locality produce pipe couplings, plastic and paper food containers, and specialty minerals.
Lafayette College in Easton was chartered in 1826, but classes did not begin until 1832. The Easton home (1757) of George Taylor, signer of the Declaration of Independence, has been restored. Nearby Hugh Moore Park includes a restored section of the Lehigh Canal, with locks, a mule-drawn canal boat, and a lock tender’s house. Inc. borough, 1789; city, 1887. Pop. (2000) 26,263; Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton Metro Area, 740,395; (2010) 26,800; Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton Metro Area, 821,173.
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