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The
history of Somerset County dates to the French and
Indian War, when military expeditions carved roads
through the wooded hills of what would become
western Pennsylvania, opening the area for
settlement.
In
1755, General Braddock and his English troops,
accompanied by George Washington, crossed the
southwestern corner of the county in an
unsuccessful attempt to conquer Fort Duquesne. The
trail, now known as U.S. Route 40, was the first
step in settling and developing Somerset County.
In
a second, successful, attempt by the English to
conquer Fort Duquesne, General Forbes and his men
carved a new trail over the Allegheny Mountains.
Forbes' Road, now known as U.S. Route 30, provided
access to the Glades, the meadows surrounding the
headwaters of streams in the center of the county.
A German Baptist religious group settled in the
Glades in 1760, establishing a church near the
village of Brotherton. Further south, a group of
Swiss and German immigrants laid out the town of
Berlin and established a church and school.
Though
those early settlers laid the foundation for
Somerset County, it was an exile from the south
who made it official. Harmon Husband fled here in
1771 after having a bounty placed on his head in
North Carolina for protesting taxes and injustice
in the local court system. The first settler in
what would become Somerset, Husband went by the
name "Tuscape Death," a clever reference
to his "wanted" status in the south.
As
a member of the General Assembly, Husband
petitioned his fellow legislators in 1790 to form
a new county west of the Allegheny Mountains. On
April 17, 1795, the Pennsylvania Legislature
passed an act organizing Brothersvalley,
Turkeyfoot, Quemahoning, Milford, Elk Lick and
Stonycreek townships into Somerset County from
Bedford County. The county was named for
Somersetshire in western England.
Since
its formation, the county's boundaries have
changed twice. In 1800, the area expanded with the
annexation of the southwestern corner of Bedford
County. In 1804, a large northern section of the
county was lost to the creation of Cambria County.
Reliable
all weather transportation to the markets of the
east coast came in 1872 with the completion of the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad line through the
southern part of the county. An extension of that
line to Johnstown later proved vital during the
1889 Johnstown Flood, when the Somerset and
Cambria subdivision was the only access to the
scene of that disaster. During the "Robber
Baron" period of the late 1800s, several
businessmen sought to break the Pennsylvania
Railroad's monopoly on shipping from the
Pittsburgh market. This resulted in the building
of the South Penn, a railroad that was never to be
finished, and would later, during the great
Depression, be purchased by the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania and finished as the Pennsylvania
Turnpike.
Today,
the county includes 25 townships and 25 boroughs
encompassing 1,074 square miles. The county has
some 80,023 people, according to the 2000 census.
Somerset
County is located atop the Allegheny Mountains in
the southwestern portion of Pennsylvania. It
borders Cambria County to the north, Bedford
County to the east, the state of Maryland to the
south and Fayette and Westmoreland counties to the
west.
A
more detailed description of the county history
can be found in area history books available at
the Somerset Historical Center and local
libraries. The center is located along Route 985
north of Somerset.
*Taken
from the Chamber of Commerce 2006 Membership
Directory*
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