Marple Friends & Neighbors magazine, March 2021

Page 20

History Spotlight

Toll House No. 5 Written by Doug Humes

T

here was once a border between Marple and Newtown where people were held up every day. The highwayman who made travelers “stand and deliver” there? Toll House No. 5. The structure, a small roadside house with a large pole that blocked the street, was part of the West Chester Turnpike, connecting West Philadelphia and Newtown Square. There was no state highway department back then, so the roads were not well maintained. In winter, they were impassable with mud and ruts; in summer, with dust and ruts.

Each toll road had its own design for milestones Photo courtesy of Marple Historical Society

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Marple Friends & Neighbors / Bringing People Together

Postcard of Toll Gate 5, with pike open Photo courtesy of Marple Historical Society

In 1848, local businessmen decided to form a corporation to improve the road – initially using wooden planks. To pay for these improvements, a toll was charged, at five toll houses between Philadelphia and Newtown Square. An early history reported that in 1897, Toll House 5, near the 10th milestone, was being kept by William Edwards. When a traveler approached, he would stop at the “pike” that blocked his path.


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