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On February
22, 1802, Governor Thomas McKean signed an Act of the Pennsylvania
General Assembly that incorporated the Borough of Canonsburg.
It was just a coincidence that the date is George Washington's
Birthday. The town on the stage road between Washington, the
county seat, and Pittsburgh was about fifteen years old. The
main street ran up a hill with a steep grade. The founder, developer,
and proprietor was John Canon, whose flour and saw mill was
at the foot of the hill. |
Early in its history, Canonsburg became a
market town. A market house stood at the intersection of what we
now know as Central Avenue and College Street. The main street,
Central Avenue (known at various times as Market, Main, and Front
Street), was lined with shops, taverns, and artisans' workshops.
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An academy was founded in Canonsburg in 1791, and in 1802
it was incorporated as Jefferson College. By 1840, the college
had become the economic base of the town and it was by far
the largest college in the state and was one of the largest
colleges in the country. In the decades before the Civil War,
about ten percent of the college students were sons of Southern
planters, who carried big knives and heavy wallets.
The Civil War, lack of alumni support, and ill-conceived
scholarship schemes drove Jefferson and Washington Colleges
to merge in 1865. For three years, the upper classes and the
commencement activities were in Canonsburg, but in 1868 the
college was united on the Washington campus.
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Photo of the Jefferson
College Campus
by Lon Porter is from a postcard |
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| The two Jefferson
College literary societies each printed a lithograph of
the college in its catalog in the late 1840s. This cut,
from the 1847 Philo Literary Society Catalog, shows a
fanciful view of Canonsburg from the south. |
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An academy was founded to
use the campus, but adolescents did not make the economic impact
the college students had. A committee convinced the Pennsylvania
Railroad to construct a branch line between Pittsburgh and Washington
by way of Mansfield (now Carnegie). The railroad made it easier
for merchants to get goods for their stores, and it put Canonsburg
in a favorable position for industrial production. The same
was true for mining. Coal had been dug for local use, but a
mine owner could not compete with mines along the river until
the coming of the railroad. |
In 1902, when Canonsburg celebrated its centennial,
the borough was in a dynamic period. Industrial production was expanding,
both in quantity and variety. Sewers, water and gas lines, electric
and telephone wires were put in. A trolley line was constructed;
first between Washington and Canonsburg, then to Pittsburgh. The
town's dirt streets were paved, and new streets were constructed.
The first immigrants to be mentioned in print
by the editor of the local newspaper were Italian men who were digging
ditches for sewer pipe. New plants were built, and the ones that
were here expanded. Manpower was needed, and very soon other accents
were heard: Russian, Slovenian, Hungarian, Greek, Polish, Slovak,
and a host of others.
In 1927, when Canonsburg celebrated its 125th
Anniversary, the town was thriving and stable. Much of the celebration
was held in what would be developed as Canonsburg's Town Park. Within
a few years it would have a large swimming pool. Construction of
the pool was accomplished through a number of federal employment
programs that provided jobs during the Depression of the 1930s.
Some local money was spent, but tax collection by the borough and
the school district was far below what was needed.
Even so, Canonsburg was not hit as hard as
many towns. The largest plant in town, Standard Tinplate, and Continental
Can Co., which was adjacent, stayed in production. Even during the
Great Depression, tin cans were a necessity. Then, with the end
of the depression and the outbreak of World War 2, shortages in
raw materials closed the mill. The process used at Standard Tinplate
was outdated and inefficient.
Canonsburg's other plants quickly shifted
to war production. The Fort Pitt Bridge Works broadened its range
of products, though the production of bridges and girders for buildings
continued. The Standard Tinplate plant was taken over by Alcoa to
produce aircraft forgings. The old Canonsburg Iron and Steel Company
rolling mill (commonly known as the Budke Works) had been closed,
but it was renovated to produce 5-inch shells for the Navy. Just
up Chartiers Creek, the plant that had been Standard Chemical when
Madame Curie visited, Vitro Chemical Works, was engaged in secret
work involving uranium for the Manhattan Project, research that
would culminate in the production of the atomic bomb.
After the war, contracts for naval ordnance
and aircraft forgings were canceled. It appeared there would be
unemployment on a great scale in Canonsburg. As had happened before,
beginning with the loss of the college in the 1860s, a committee
was formed. In 1946, public-spirited citizens brought Pennsylvania
Transformer Co. to Canonsburg from Pittsburgh's North Side. The
Transformer used part of the space abandoned by Alcoa, and the following
year, RCA also began operation in the mill buildings.
When Canonsburg celebrated its 150th Anniversary,
the Sesquicentennial, in 1952, another longtime industrial operation,
the Continental Can Company, had shut down the previous year. By
the following year, railroad passenger service and the trolley line
were no more. Changes came quickly in the years following the Sesquicentennial,
both economic and social. Pittsburgh had been a quick trip on the
interurban trolley (usually called the streetcar) or the railroad.
The automobile was the preferred means of transportation, and the
interstate highway system was being constructed.
Malls sprang up in profusion. Residents no
longer walked or took the City Loop to stores along Pike Street;
they got in their cars and went to a mall. Saturday night shopping
changed to Friday night in 1955, but gradually the crowds along
the streets thinned and the sidewalks weren't crowded at all. For
many years there had been two movie theaters and numerous bars along
Pike Street. Television reduced the need for entertainment outside
the home. The movie theaters are gone and the kinds of businesses
in town have changed over the years. A store selling hats would
be as out of place today as a computer business would have been
in the 1930s. Dress shops and shoe stores have become antique shops.
The largest employer in the county, Cooper Power Systems, formerly
Pennsylvania Transformer and McGraw-Edison, shut down in 1994.
Canonsburg's newspaper, the Daily Notes,
came off the press for the last time in 1980 after more than a century
of informing and sometimes hectoring the residents. Tabloid size
newspapers, The Canon being the most successful, were published
into 1992. Without a newspaper, there has been no organ to proclaim
how dynamic Canonsburg is. No longer is it a market town where farmers
visited the stores on Saturday nights. Gone is the college town
where boys built bonfires in the street to gain a glance from the
young maidens of Olome Seminary. Only vestiges remain of the mill
and mining town where men walked home covered with grease and grime.
Change is a part of Canonsburg's history
and its future. The Bridge Works is gone, but Colonial Iron Works
uses part of the old facility, as Pennsylvania Transformer Technology
and other businesses uses parts of the old transformer plant. East
Pike Street has been renovated to the extent it is not recognizable.
A jumble of dilapidated buildings has been replaced by modern structures
with open spaces and adequate parking. Even the creek has been scoured
and straightened.
If anything, there is more citizen involvement
today than before. The town's Fourth of July Committee meets year-round
to put on activities and a parade that has grown to be one of the
largest in the state. There is a historical society, formed in the
1960s when the old college building known as the Chapel Gym was
torn down. In the 1990s, the Heritage Society was formed and erected
a statue of Perry Como in front of the municipal building. New projects
are in the works. The Canonsburg Merchants and Professional Organization
and the Chamber of Commerce are active, and a Renaissance organization
is studying ways to improve the town and its environs.
Change is inevitable, and Canonsburg has seen more than two centuries'
worth. The one constant has been Canonsburg's citizens. When a need
is seen, people will form a committee and meet that need. That's
just the way things are done.
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