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==The Muhlenberg House in the 21st Century==
==The Muhlenberg House in the 21st Century==

In 1999, a national drugstore cahin expressed interest in the Muhlenberg property; their plans were to demolish the house and build a store. The community rallied to save the home of Trappe's most illustrious citizen, forming Save the Speaker's House, Inc. The organization was incorporated as a 501(c)3 non-profit in September, 2001 and subsequently succeeded in purchasing the property on April 1st 2004. In 2005, Save the Speaker's House, Inc. obtained a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services that provided the group with funds for researching the property and operating the organization. In 2006, with the support of a grant from the Montgomery County Green Fields/Green Towns Open Space Program, the mortgage was paid off and the property was placed under a conservation easement to ensure that it be permanently preserved as open space.

==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

Revision as of 16:30, 22 May 2008

The Speaker's House (Or Frederick A. Muhlenberg's House) is a historical museum located in Trappe, PA that preserves the home of Frederick August Muhlenberg, the First and Third Speaker of the United States House of Representatives.

History of the Speaker's House

Overview of the Speaker's House: From 1764-1781

John Joseph Schrack (1712-1772) and his wife Eva Rosina Lang Schrack (1688-1756), were immigrants from Germany and were the first settlers in the Trappe area where they built a log cabin there in 1717, and they are now considered to be the actual founders of the village there. Five children were born once the family had settled in Trappe. They were the twins Maria Sabin and Anna Maria; Christian; Elizabeth Schrack; and John Jacob II. John Jacob Schrack I purchased 250 acres at the south end of the borough area[1]. He became the community leader, and an active member of the German Lutheran Church who ran the respectable tavern known as "the Trap", after which the village would become named. A minister named Henry Melchior Muhlenberg came to Trappe in 1742. In 1750-1755, John Jacob II built the house that Henry Muhlenberg bought in 1776. John Joseph Schrack stayed on the family homestead, caring for his mother in her widowhood and operating the family tavern. John Joseph married Silence (1712-1777) a native of New England, in 1738. They had 7 children, 2 boys and 5 girls. They had been married for 26 years before they built their own home on the land left to John Joseph by his mother. John Joseph and Silence sold the house to James Diemer for 725 pounds on 24 February 1772, and John Joseph died 5 1/2 weeks later on 11 April 1772[2].

Very little is known about James Diemer, Esq., who purchased the 89.25 acres from John and Silence Schrack on 21 February 1772, other than his marriage to Elizabeth Currie on December 5th 1759 in Swedes' Church (Gloria Dei) in Philadelphia. A James Diemer lived in Reading, was a Justice of the Peace before the Revolution, served as a judge in Berks County from 1791 to 1819, and died in 1820[3]. A definite connection between the James Diemer of Reading and the owner of the Muhlenberg House has not been established, but it would be a reasonable supposition that a resident of Reading might have become familiar with the property while traveling back and forth to Philadelphia. If the James Diemer of Reading was the one, it is unlikely that he and his family lived in the house; more probably, it was purchased as an investment and rented to tenants. James and Elizabeth Diemer sold Michael Connor the 89.25 acres on November 6th 1775 for 905 pounds. Again not much is known about Michael Connor, a Philadelphia merchant, other than that his marriage to Mary Cottringer (or possible Gatringer) took place on January 9th 1774. The Connors probably lived in the house, as Henry Muhlenberg refers to Neighbor Connor in his journals[4].

John Patton (1745-1804) purchased the property from Michael and Mary Connor on Saturday March 1st 1777 for 1,500 pounds, and married Jane Davis (1752-1832) the next Friday on March 7th 1777, in the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia. In the deed, both Patton and the Connors were described as being from the city of Philadelphia, and Michael Connor is described as a merchant. John Patton was born in Sligo, Ireland and came to Philadelphia in 1745[5]. John joined the Continental Army in March 1776 as Major in the 9th Pennsylvania Regiment; he was promoted to the rank of Colonel on January 11th 1777, and commanded 1 of 16 Additional Regiments under General George Washington. He resigned his commission in November 1777. It would appear that John bought the house to provide a safe home for his new bride outside occupied Philadelphia while he was serving in the military. In a letter that Peter Muhlenberg wrote in 1799, he described the house, where the Swaines were then living, as the house below him where Col. Paaten had lived. John and Jane had 11 or 12 children; the oldest, Benjamin, possibly was born while they were living in the Muhlenberg House. John Patton sold the house in September 1778[6].

The next purchaser of the property was Isaac Connely (1747-1823) who bought the property on September 4th 1778 for 2350 pounds and it was purely a business transaction as he had sold it 22 days later to John Reed, making a profit of 60 pounds on the transaction. John Reed is described as an Innkeeper on his September 26th 1778 deed of his purchase of the 89.25 acre property[7]. John Reed (1723-1790) moved with his wife Dorothy and family to Trappe in 1774, where he became a farmer, and owner of a tavern and of the local grist mill in Providence Township. He was mentioned at least 100 times in the journal of Henry Melchior Muhlenberg; H. M. Muhlenberg usually referred to him as Neighbor Ried. Over the years from 1776 to 1783, Reed provided H. M. Muhlenberg with a horse and wagon for haulage, and sold him firewood, beef, veal, salt, pork, rye and oats. In May 1781, Henry Muhlenberg approached Reed regarding a doctor who had been considering settling in Trappe. Reed offered 2 large rooms in his big house, half of the cellar, adequate firewood, and fodder for his horse at 20 pounds sliver money a year. The house in question may have been the Frederick Muhlenberg House, as the doctor did not rent the house offered, and Reed agreed to sell the Muhlenberg House 5 months later[8].

Frederick Augustus Conrad (Frederick) Muhlenberg (1781-1791)

Frederick Muhlenberg (1750-1901) was one of 11 children of Henry Melchior Muhlenberg (1711-1787) and his wife Anna Maria Weiser (1727-1802). Henry Muhlenberg, a German immigrant at the age of 32, was head of the Lutheran church in America for more than 40 years and was a leader in the German American community. Frederick who was educated in Germany along with his brothers Peter and Henry, became the first and third Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, and the first person to sign the Bill of Rights[9]. Frederick married Anna Catherine Schaeffer (1750-1835) on October 15th 1771. Their marriage produced 7 children; Henry William; Maria; Elisabeth; Margaret; Ann Catherine; Frederick; and John Peter David. Frederick was sent to Germany with his brothers at 13 years old; he then returned when he was 23 years old and was then ordained into the ministry. He became an assistant to his brother in law, Rev. Christopher Emmanuel Schulze in Tulpehocken, Pennsylvania. Frederick and Catherine moved to New York City in 1773 when Frederick answered a call to a German Lutheran church known as Christ or Swamp Church. The family then lived in Philadelphia briefly before leaving for Trappe, the home of Frederick's parents, on August 16th, where Frederick assisted his father with pastoral duties[10].

Within about a year, Frederick and Catherine moved to New Hanover, where they were living with 3 children, a maid, a nurse; brother Henry Ernst and his wife and child; and sister Mary Swaine and her husband Francis. In 1779, at 29 years old, Frederick decided to resign from the ministry and enter political life[11]. He was supported in his political ambitions by his father in law, but his own father was distraught by his decision to leave the ministry. In 1779 he was appointed as a delegate to the Continental Congress to fulfill the term of Edward Biddle, where he served until 1780. In 1780, he was elected to the Pennsylvania Assembly, and at the opening session on November 3rd 1780 he was chosen as Speaker of the Assembly[12].

It was following this entry into public life, on December 19th 1781, that Frederick Muhlenbergy purchased the stone house next door to his father's house for 800 pounds, to serve as a home for him and his family. It was a safe and settled location, close to extended family, where he could leave his wife and children during the long absences necessitated by his new career. Frederick purchased the property with his business partner Christopher Wegman. Frederick purchased an additional 5 3/4 acres from Jacob and Elisabeth Miller on May 5th 1783. On March 18th 1785, Christopher Wegman and his wife Margaret sold their half of the property to Frederick for 450 pounds[13].

Frederick was again elected to the Pennsylvania Assembly in 1781 and 1782, and again elected Speaker. Frederick was elected President of the Council of Censors for Philadelphia County in 1783, and Register of Wills and Recorder of Deeds for the newly formed Montgomery County in September 1784. His house in Trappe became the setting for local business, such as real estate sales[14]. In addition to his political career, Frederick was developing a mercantile business in the 1780s. He and his business partner Christopher Wegman, under the name Muhlenberg & Wegman, operated a store in Second Street between Arch and Race. Frederick also operated a store on his property in Trappe. Following the death of his father in law in 1787, Frederick became involved with sugar refining. He formed a partnership with Jacob Lawersyler that lasted until 1800, when the firm failed[15].

The pinnacle of Frederick's political career came in 1789, when he was elected to the House of Representatives in the First United States Congress. As Speaker, Frederick was paid twice the salary of other Congressmen, but was expected to undertake a certain amount of entertaining. As a result of his position as Speaker, in September of 1789 Frederick Muhlenberg became the first signer of the Bill of Rights[16]. The first two sessions of the First Congress (March to September 1789, and January to August, 1790) were held in New York. The third session, beginning December 6th 1790 and running until March, 1791, was held in Philadelphia. It was during the third session, three months after the Congress moved to Philadelphia, that Muhlenberg sold his house in Trappe. Perhaps he decided that since he would thereafter be based in Philadelphia, he no longer needed a seat in Trappe and could bring his family to live in Philadelphia on a permanent basis[17].

Another highlight of Frederick Muhlenberg's career that occurred while he owned the house in Trappe was his position as President of the Pennsylvania Convention to ratify the new federal constitution in 1787. In addition he was a Trustee of the University of Pennsylvania, then called the University of the State of Pennsylvania, from 1779 until 1786; from 1780 to 1783, as Speaker of the Pennsylvania Assembly, he was an ex officio trustee; in other years, he was elected to the position. In December, 1790 he was elected president of the German Society of Pennsylvania and served until 1797[18].

After he left Trappe, Frederick's political career continued to thrive. He was elected to the Second United States Congress in 1791; the Third in 1793, when he was again elected Speaker of the House of Representatives; and the Fourth in 1795. During the Fourth Congress, Muhlenberg was chairman of the Committee to the Whole and presided over the contentious debate over an appropriation to support the provisions of the Jay Treaty with Great Britain, an agreement favored by the Federalists but opposed by the Jeffersonians. As chairman, Muhlenberg provided the deciding vote that appropriated the funds, though he later sided with the Jeffersonians. His vote was extremely unpopular with many of his constituents, and made his own brother in law, Bernhard Schaeffer, so enraged that he stabbed Muhlenberg[19].

Muhlenberg did not run for the Fifth Congress, and in 1800, Governor Thomas McKean appointed him Receiver General of the Pennsylvania Land Office. The Muhlenbergs moved to Lancaster, the seat of state government, where Frederick died suddenly of a stroke on June 4th 1801[20].

Post Frederick Muhlenberg

On February 28th 1791, Frederick Muhlenberg sold his house and lot, as well as the adjacent tract of land, to his sister and brother in law Mary and Francis Swaine, of "New Providence Township". The Swains may have been living in the Muhlenberg house and managing the farm and store as early as 1790, when they were listed as residing in Providence Township, though they did not then own a house there. The Swaines had four children, all of whom died young. All four of the children spent part or all of their brief lives in the house[21].

For the 1798 Direct Tax, the house was assessed at 800 dollars and the property, at 1,380 dollars. The two story 30 by 25 foot stone dwelling had a total square footage of 1,500. Four outbuildings were assessed, including a stone kitchen 20 feet by 15 feet, a stone store room, also 20 feet by 15 feet, and a stone store, 20 feet by 30 feet. The stone barn was 30 feet by 40 feet[22].

Francis's brother in law Peter Muhlenberg wrote a letter, possibly to Taverner Beale, on January 4th 1799 about how he still lived at the Trapp in the house that his father had lived in. He mentioned that Mr. Swaine lived in the first house below him where Col. Patten lived. He kept a store and was a magistrate[23].

The property was sold on November 24th 1803 to Charles Albrecht of Philadelphia. The sale included 3 contiguous tracts of land: the 50 acre and the 5 3/4 quarter acre tracts Swaine had purchased from Muhlenberg, and the 11 acres and 9 perches purched from Magargel (on the 1803 deed the Magargel tract was measured at 10 acres 89 perches)[24].

The 19th Century Muhlenberg House

The Early 19th Century

Charles Albrecht (1759 or 1760- 1848) was the first owner at the beginning of the 19th century. He is listed on the property deed as a musical instrument maker, and it turns out the he was one of the first piano makers in America. Charles Albrecht was born in Germany. In Philadelphia in 1787, he married Maria Fuchs; in a 1797 deed, Maria Fuchs, anglicized to mary Fox, is identified as the widow of John Fox who was remarried to Charles Albrecht. On February 15th 1798, Charles became a naturalized citizen[25]. The reasons for his move to Trappe in 1803 are unknown, though it is appparent that he did move into the house he purchased from the Swains, i.e the Frederick Muhlenberg house. He is listed in the Philadelphia directories from 1791 through 1802, and again after 1809, but is absent from the directories for 1805 through 1808, coinciding with his ownership of the property in Trappe. He is also listed on the annual tax rolls for Montgomery County as an instrument maker. This suggests that he continued to carry on his trade while living in Trappe[26].

The building used by the Muhlenbergs as a store may have been converted into a workshop for the manufactory of pianos during his tenure. Charles and his wife Mary sold the property of 66 acres, 49 perches to Abraham Gotwals, Esquire, of Upper Providence Township on April 1st 1808 for 1,750 dollars[27].

Abraham Gotwals (1764-18??) was the son of German born John Adam Gotwals (1719-1795), who immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1739 on the ship Samuel. Abraham married Magdalena Detweiler (1764-1830) in 1785; both were natives of Montgomery County. They had 12 children in the 20 years following their marriage. The family appears in the Upper Providence roll in the 1810 census with a household of 11 people: three under ten, three between ten and fifteen, and three between sixteen and twenty five, in addition to the two parents who were then both forty six. The nine children in the household may have been all the surviving offspring. Of the twelve children listed in the family bible, three girls were named Maria and two, Catarina. This could indiate that three of the girls died as infants; the presence of nine children in 1810 is supporting evidence[28].

On April 29th 1811, Abraham and Magdalena sold the property of 66 acres and 49 perches to Sarah Bartleson, of the village of Trap in Upper Providence township for 5,600 dollars. On the deed, Abraham was identified as a resident of Perkiomen, indicating that the family had already moved; they may have moved to live with or be close to relatives, since Magdalena came from nearby Skippack[29].

Dr. William Johnson (1785-1831) was the son of Henry Jonson (1764-1811). He married Sarah Bartleson (1790-1838), on June 11th 1811, 43 days after she purchased the house and shortly after his father's death on May 23rd. When Sarah bought the farm, according to the deed, the 5,600 dollar fee for the 66 acres, 49 perches was paid for by Israel Bartleson. This was probably her grandfather. In 1820, the household consisted of William and Sarah, the three children, all then under 10 years old, and one male aged between 16 and 26 years old, probably a farm hand. Ten years later, there was one male beteen ten and fifteen (son William), one male between 40 and 50 (Dr. Johnson), one male between 50 and 60 (identity unknown), one female between 10 and 15 (daughter Sarah), one female between 15 and 20 (daughter Mary), two females between 40 and 50 (Sarah, and an unknown woman) and one female betwen 60 and 70 (identity unknown)[30].

The Muhlenberg House, or some part of it, was rented to a David Williams, who owed Sarah Johnson rent at the time of her death. It is evident that this was at the same house from David Williams' appearance in the 1840 census, who had been the enxt door neighbor of Dr. William Johnson in the 1840 census[31].

Henry A. Hunsicker remembered a one story wing attached to the east side of the house, fronting the turnpike, which was used for store purposes, which was used for store purposes, and which was at one time occupied by Felty Fitzgerald, who sold watermelons and trucks. It is possible that Sarah Johnson rented the store after the death of her husband; possibly that troe which had been used as Dr. Johnson's office when he was a practicing physician[32].

Valentine "Felty" Fitzgerald was born in 1795 and married a woman named Magdalena. They had four children, Valentine, Sophia, David, and an unnamed child who was born August 31st 1827 and died two weeks later. The three youngest children were baptized at Augustus Lutheran Chruch in Trappe. In 1820, his household consisted of himself, his wife (between 16 and 26), an unknown female over the age of 45, and two children, a boy and a girl, both under 10; he was engaged in agriculture. In 1830, the household consisted of himself, a female between 20 and 30, and two boys, one between 5 and 10, and one between 10 and 15. In 1860, when he was 65, he was boarding with the Jacob Markley family and working as a day laborer[33].

When Dr. William Johnson died in 1831, his estate was insolvent; his widow was allowed to claim about 88 dollars in household goods, with the remaining 221 dollars in possessions, which included furniture as well as surgical instruments, medical books and a "Shower Bath," being sold to satisfy creditors. When their daughter Sarah died just 10 years later, at the age of 25, she was possessed of a piano, furniture, silverware, jewelry and other items valued at 595 dollars, in addition to a dower fund[34].

The origin of the dower fund is not known, but may have been provided for Sarah Bartleson Johnson by her grandfather Israel Bartleson, who also paid for the farm in 1811. Though Sarah Johnson left the farm to her grandmother in the will she wrote on July 4th 1840, 5 months later, on December 18th 1840, she sold 36 acres and 53 perches, which included the Muhlenberg House, to her uncle Wright Bringhurst[35].

Wright Bringhurst divided the Muhlenberg property into two equal tracts. The tract of 16 acres and 52 perches containing the house he sold on December 27th 1841 to his uncle Enos LEwis, brother of his mother Mary Lewis Bringhurst. The other tract of 16 acres and 106 1/2 perches he sold on February 24 1845 to George Hagy[36].

Enos Lewis married Margaret Dewees, but they had no children. Enos LEwis purchased from George Hagy the other portion of the Muhlenberg farm that Wright Bringhurst had subdivided, reuniting the farm in March 1849. In 1850, Enos, 68 years old, and Margaret, 50 years old, were living in the Muhlenberg House with three other people: Ann Hess, aged 17; Susanna Clemmens, a mulatto girl aged 12; and Joshua Davis, a black laborer aged 40. On April 2nd 1855, Enos and Margaret Lewis sold both tracts of land to Samuel Townsend of Philadelphia[37].

The Lewises built a house on the corner lot east of Bringhurst's Manion, fronting the Reading Turnpike, apparently selling the farm[38].

1850-1900

Samuel Townsend (1817-1860), a 38 year old Philadelphia businessman, burst upon the Trappe real estate scene in the spring of 1855. The month before, he had started buying up farms: 32 acres from Enos Lewis on April 2nd; an unspecified tract from Eleanor Shupe on April 2nd; 5 tracts totaling 49 acres from John Heneks on April 3rd; 81 acres from John Todd on April 19th; 160 acres from Abraham Hunsicker on April 27th; and 57 acres from Edward Evans and D. Morgan Casselberry[39].

In the latter part of 1854 or 1855 Samuel put his brother Thomas on a farm of his near the Trappe in in Montgomery County so that he could work it. There is no way to know if Thomas was living in the Muhlenberg house during his stay in Trappe, though "near the Trappe" may indicate that it was on another of the Townsend farms. Samuel and Thomas had difficulty before Thomas left the farm. Thomas had refused to leave the farm unless Samuel would secure him according to promises made to him prior to this. Thomas had ntohign to live on excepting three ground rents[40].

After his divroce and remarriage, Townsend spent much of his time in Trappe; he occupied a property east of the Muhlenberg House purchased at auction on February 15th 1864 by James Hamer, M.D., for 10,532.80 dollars. There is a possiblity that Samuel's wife Ann occupied the Muhlenberg House at times when she was in Trappe, though by March, 1860 the house had been sold to Henry Shuler[41].

Henry Shuler (1817-1864) purchased the property from Samuel and Christiana Townsend on March 17th 1860, and moved into the house with his family. Less than four years later, on May 3rd 1864, Henry died, and his family was sent into disarray without its breadwinner. Six years after that, at the time fo the 1870 census, Elizabeth Shuler, Henry's mother, was boarding with another family in Trappe, and Shuler's wife Maria was renting ahouse. She owned no real estate, though her personal property was valued at 5,100 dollars. The increase in the familyh's personal property probably resulted from the sale of the Muhlneberg House. The house was sold by order of the Mongomery County Orphan's Court. Dr. Lewis Royer bought the property at auction on September 20th 1867.

Lewis Royer was already living on the Muhlenberg property when he purchased it at auction orderd by the Orphan's Court on September 20th 1867. He had been there for at least four months, but how much longer he may have been living there is not known. It was Lewis Royer who dramatically remodeled the 18th century farmhouse; he added the rear section, transformed the front and center sections into a Second Empire residence, demolished the store on the east side of the front section, possibly demolished a wing on the west side, and built the one story addition on the west side as a doctor's office on the foundations of an earlier wing.

On April 10th 1884, Royer sold the house, with all the property except for four small lots totaling a little over two acres that had been sold previously to Aaron D. Wagner. However, in 1890, he bought back the Muhlenberg property, then compromised of 30 acres 40 perhces, and owned it for the rest of his life.

Andrew Heyser Detwiler (1863-1933) purchased the property, then totaling 29 acres and 92 and 22/100 perches, from the estate of Lewis Royer on March 31st 1908. In October of 1924, he sold the farm.

On October 2nd 1924, Henry W. Mathieu and Percy W. Mathieu purchased the property from A. Heyser Detwiler, and less than four weeks later on October 28th 1924, they sold the house and 10.77 acres to Ursinus College.

Ursinus College (1924-1944)

Ursinus College purchased the house and ten acres to alleviate a campus housing shortage. This new building had been christened Highland Hall. It was situated along a little elevation along Main Street, about 8 minutes wlaking distance from the campus. It appears that students were housed in the building even before its purchase from A. Heyser Detwiler, as the 1924-25 college catalog described it as a dormitory for men that rpovided every comfort and convenience and which accomodated 28 students.

At the time of purchase, improvements were made to covert the residence to a dormitory for 26 to 28 freshmen boys, as well as quarters for a houseman and caretaker. A new 100 foot artesian well was drilled and fitted with a pump, additional bathing and toilet facilities were installed, and clothes closets were constructed in several rooms. A new Freed Heater was installed to supply steam heat.

By the beginning of the next school year, in the fall of 1925, the house had become the Ursinus College Athletic Club, a dormitory and training club for the male varsity players. It was during its six years as the Athletic Club that the house had its highest profile while in the ownership of the college. It became the site of the annual football banquest in December 1929. The Athletic Club use lasted until the end of the 1930-31 school year. By 1930, athletics were being consolidated on the main campus, and the Ursinus College Bulletin noted that the Athletic Club property in Trappe couldn't be run to meet expenses. In the fall of 1931, athletes were once again living on the main campus.

The Muhlenberg House was converted back to a private residence for Russell Conwell Johnson (1894-1950), Ursinus College's recently hired first athletic director, and his family: wife Mary Siez and son Donald. Russell "Jing" Johnson was an Ursinus alumnus, an honors graduate in chemistry with the class of 1916, and star of the baseball team. The Johnsons appear to have lived in the Muhlenberg House for about six years (1931-1937), but Russell Johnson cointued coaching for Ursinus through 1941, when he joined the war effort as a training officer at the Philadelphia Navy Yard. He died in 1950.

While being used as residence in 1932, the college valued Highland Hall at 22,294.05 dollars. The barn had been demolished, probably part or all of the reason the outbuildings had depreciated to a value of 13,363.63 dollars. Faced once again with the problem of more students than dormitory beds, Ursinus College pressed Highland Hall into service as student housing for the 1937-1938 school year. The next year the college announced that though 17 men still lived at Highland Hall, it was intending to sell the property because of its age, its remoteness from the campus, and the excessive cost of upkeep and operation. However, the next year, still using the building as a men's dorm, the college undertook extensive alterations to the house. The front porch and a portion of the side porch were completely removed and were replaced with a flagstone terrace, and a cornice was erected around 2 sides of the building at the 2nd floor levle, which harmonized with the 3rd story mansard effect. The one story frame addation at the rear of the building was removed and appropriate architectural treatments of both the front and rear entraces were provided. The interior was completely renovated during the summer, all the old wallpaper was moved, the walls and ceilings were covered with a light enamel paint, and the woodwork and floors were repaired and repainted. Highland became one of the most attractive of the men's dorms.

In the summer of 1942, the building was converted to a women's residence hall. To make the hall more attractive to upper class womand the tution and board bill was 50.00 dollars less than the regular fee for women. The dormitory underwent necessary painting, papering and repair and could accomodte 17 girls. This experiment lasted only 2 years and on July 13th 1944, the college sold the property, which had been unsatisfactory as a residence hall because of its remoteness from the campus, to Andrew and Myrtle Rihl. Ursinus had previously sold 7 acres to the Collegeville-Trappe School District for erection of a new high school in 1938; the property sold to the Rihls contained 2.826 acres.

Andrew Hoover Rihl, who, with his wife Myrtle, purchased the Muhlenberg House from Ursinus College, spent almsot his entire working life as a salesman and inspector for the Keystone Blue Paper Co., a leader in the development of the process of blueprinting.

1950-21st Century

Henry L. Haas (1908-1994) bought the house with 1.9819 acres on July 6th 1950. Henry's first wife, Anna, died after they bought the property, and he remarried a woman named Lenore. The Haas family occupied the entire house for many years. In the 1990s, they converted the 2nd and 3rd floors to rental apartments, and lived on the 1st floor.

The Muhlenberg House in the 21st Century

In 1999, a national drugstore cahin expressed interest in the Muhlenberg property; their plans were to demolish the house and build a store. The community rallied to save the home of Trappe's most illustrious citizen, forming Save the Speaker's House, Inc. The organization was incorporated as a 501(c)3 non-profit in September, 2001 and subsequently succeeded in purchasing the property on April 1st 2004. In 2005, Save the Speaker's House, Inc. obtained a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services that provided the group with funds for researching the property and operating the organization. In 2006, with the support of a grant from the Montgomery County Green Fields/Green Towns Open Space Program, the mortgage was paid off and the property was placed under a conservation easement to ensure that it be permanently preserved as open space.

References

  1. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  2. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  3. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  4. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  5. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  6. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  7. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  8. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  9. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  10. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  11. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  12. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  13. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  14. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  15. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  16. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  17. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  18. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  19. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  20. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  21. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  22. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  23. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  24. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page 4
  25. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  26. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  27. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  28. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  29. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  30. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  31. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  32. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  33. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  34. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  35. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  36. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  37. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  38. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  39. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  40. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page
  41. ^ Watson, Penelope S. and Henry, Michael C. Historic Structure Report for the Frederick Muhlenberg House 151 West Main Street Trappe, Pennsylvania. Volume 1 of II. Watson & Henry Associates. December 2007. Page