{"id":169,"date":"2011-09-15T12:58:59","date_gmt":"2011-09-15T16:58:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/glenprovidencepark.org\/?p=169"},"modified":"2012-12-03T15:40:42","modified_gmt":"2012-12-03T20:40:42","slug":"pre-park-history-scroggie-valley","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/glenprovidencepark.org\/2011\/09\/15\/pre-park-history-scroggie-valley\/","title":{"rendered":"Pre-park history: Scroggie Valley!"},"content":{"rendered":"
Before Glen Providence Park was established, its valley was called Scroggie! [1] \u00a0It was even the setting for an 18th century Ghost Story<\/a>!<\/strong><\/p>\n From a description of Media in 1900:\u00a0\u00a0“Turn to the west, and you shall see a landscape not devoid of wildness. Scroggie valley… with its lake and its rill;\u00a0<\/strong>[2] the wide vale of Ridley Creek…; Mineral Hill, rugged and scarred; the heights of Lima and the stately dome of Elwyn. And when the sun\u00a0sinks of a summer evening behind those western hills, and the hues of that landscape shift and change;\u00a0<\/strong>or\u00a0when of an afternoon, a thunder storm comes slowly down the valley; then does one at last perceive the full charm of this little bit of the world which is at his own door.”\u00a0\u00a0<\/strong><\/em>[3]\u00a0[bold added]<\/p>\n Wood Thrush ("wood-robin")<\/p><\/div>\n In 1889, T. Chalkley Palmer wrote about \u201cScroggie\u201d, [4]\u00a0 fondly recounting his exploration of Scroggie Valley since early childhood.\u00a0\u00a0\u201cAs for the valley and its hills as they now are, I have known all their nooks since the beauty, the quietness, and the nameless charm of Scroggie drew my steps through the opening, and by degrees toward the far, blue, woody ending thereof more than twenty years ago.\u201d<\/em>\u00a0[5]<\/p>\n T.C. Palmer admired Scroggie\u2019s plants:<\/strong> trailing arbutus, laurel, blackberries, purple lady\u2019s slipper, \u201cjewel-weeds\u201d, oaks and chestnut trees; [6] its birds:<\/strong> chewink, oven-bird and \u201cwood-robin\u201d; [7] and its fish:<\/strong> redfins, minnows, sunfish and roach. In Scroggie Valley, a young T.C. Palmer learned to distinguish frog and toad eggs. His tales of wildlife encounters<\/strong> include lizards, black snakes, woodchuck, snappers, grasshoppers, crickets, and a story about catching a watersnake named Joe<\/strong>, who refused to eat in captivity:\u00a0\u201cA council was held, and as a result we carried him back to Scroggie and liberated him.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n Northern Water Snake - Joe's descendant?<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n Who was T. Chalkley Palmer<\/strong>? \u00a0He grew up at a mill house along Ridley Creek where the Aqua plant is located- at the mouth of Scroggie Valley. He went on to become the president both of the Delaware County Institute of Science<\/a><\/strong>, and of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia!<\/strong><\/p>\n It is fortunate to have this detailed 1889 description of Scroggie Valley as a reference for today’s Glen Providence Park!<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Scroggie House:<\/strong><\/p>\n We don’t know which was named first, the house or the valley.\u00a0 A house at Kirk Lane & Ridley Creek Road, near the mouth of Broomall\u2019s Run, was called Scroggie as late as 1952. It was said to be named after a shingle mill that was once in Scroggie Valley where the park is now located. [8]<\/p>\n <\/p>\n End Notes:<\/strong><\/p>\n [1] Scroggie is a Scottish word which means \u201ccovered with underwood, bushy.\u201d<\/p>\n [2] The lake is Broomall’s Lake, and a rill is a small brook.\u00a0 The brook is now called Broomall\u2019s Run.<\/p>\n [3] Quote from the \u201cSemi-centennial of the borough of Media, Penna, May 19, 1900\u201d<\/p>\n [4] T. Chalkley Palmer\u2019s 13 page essay \u201cScroggie\u201d was published over three issues of\u00a0 a Philadelphia monthly\u00a0The Student<\/em>, the 1889-1890 issues being compiled in one volume:<\/p>\n – \u201cScroggie: Where and What It Is,\u201d December 1889, pages 91-94<\/p>\n – \u201cScroggie: Early Memories,\u201d January 1890, pages 122-126<\/p>\n – \u201cScroggie As It Is,\u201d February 1890, pages 169-172<\/p>\n<\/a>
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