Except ... the town in Pennsylvania is SwaRthmore. It was named after the college and so has only had that name since the late 1800s. Before that it was a part of Springfield Township and was called Westdale after the artist Benjamin West. Jane http://www.hootowlhollow.com http://www.hootowlhollow.blogspot.com --- On Mon, 6/8/09, Mary <[email protected]> wrote: From: Mary <[email protected]> Subject: [PaOldC] Book on line To: "k" <[email protected]> Date: Monday, June 8, 2009, 1:38 PM Hello, thank you for give us the Internet site for the book "Immigration of the Irish Quakers...:). I have downloaded the complete file. I've gone onto a site which has listed currently the Quaker meetings. I seem to remember someone saying that one of the meeting places was only open certain times of the year. Does anyone know anything about that and is the New Garden Meeting House still in the same area as these lots(1708-1713) which were tittled Manor of Stenning, later New Garden Township. From where did the name Stenning come? Maybe that is in this book too. Anyone interested if I do find the answer? In the book there is a place in Ireland called Swathmore(having to do with the Quaker religion too) so now I understand from where came Swathmore, PA. Mary in Alabama always searching families: Terrell, Hall, Culleney/Cullen, Pyle, Starr, Fincher, Hurford, Fairlamb, Pringle, Russell, Buckingham of PA, DE and MD. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message