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Poquessing Creek is a 10.3-mile-long (16.6 km) creek,[1] a right tributary of the Delaware River, that forms part of the boundary between Bucks County and the northeast section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It has been part of the boundary between Bucks and Philadelphia counties since 1682.

Interstate 95 and Amtrak Northeast Corridor Bridges crossing over the creek
Interstate 95 and Amtrak Northeast Corridor Bridges crossing over the creek

The creek arises in Trevose and meanders to the southeast before emptying into the Delaware River. The name Poquessing comes from the Lenape "Poetquessnink," meaning "place of the mice." The mouth of the Poquessing on the Delaware was first proposed as the site for William Penn's Philadelphia, and for many years the surrounding area was known as "Old Philadelphia."[2]

The Poquessing drains an area of approximately 21.5 square miles (56 km2) in Philadelphia, Montgomery, and Bucks counties, including portions of the municipalities of Philadelphia, Upper Southampton, Lower Southampton, Lower Moreland, and Bensalem.

Poquessing Creek and its tributaries have largely escaped the "channelization" process that has transformed significant portions of other watercourses in the city into storm sewers, as the map at this site discloses. This sewerization process had been used in the past to allow land to be leveled and filled in order to preserve the traditional, regular rectangular grid of streets and property lines so common to the city. By the 1930s this process was seen as creating many problems.

During the late 1950s, housing in new developments was built with curving through-streets that conformed to the natural topography, avoiding the need to fill or level the terrain. The Morrell Park neighborhood was the first in Philadelphia to follow this new pattern, avoiding for years any development near the stream valley of Byberry Creek, which flows through and about the neighborhood before its confluence with the Poquessing (though later years saw development much closer to the stream than originally envisioned). Channelization of the Poquessing affected only a tiny unnamed creek below Grant Avenue near Fluehr Park.[3]

Though Byberry Creek and its two branches, Wilsons Run and Waltons Run, remain free-flowing, their entire courses are owned and operated by the city as an integral part of the city's storm sewer system, and are so marked on city departmental maps. Despite this circumstance, they have lovely courses during low water flows.


Geology


Poquessing Creek starts out flowing on a bedrock of felsic gneiss, from the Cambrian, consisting of quartz. microcline, pyroxene, and biotite, buff to pink color and fine to medium grained.

Then it flows into a region of the Wissahickon Formation, from the Paleozoic, a schist, a metamorphic rock containing garnet, staurolite, kyanite, and sillimanite. Varieties include oligoclase-mica schist.

As the Poquessing passes along the border between Philadelphia and Bucks County, the Pennsauken and Bridgeton Formations, from the Tertiary, consisting of quartz sand, overlie the Wissahickon Formation, but the creek has eroded below these formations to flow along the Wissahickon Formation.

Then, the last few hundred yards (meters) before emptying into the Delaware River, it flows through the Trenton Gravel formation, from the Quaternary, consisting of reddish-brown gravely sand and silt.[4]


Tributaries



Historic bridges


Frankford Avenue Bridge
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Frankford Avenue bridge over the Poquessing Creek.
LocationPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°03′54″N 74°58′52″W
Built1904
ArchitectJohn McMenamy
MPSHighway Bridges Owned by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Transportation TR
NRHP reference No.88000850[5]
Added to NRHPJune 22, 1988

Several historic bridges cross the Poquessing.


Quotation


From The History of Philadelphia's Watersheds and Sewers compiled by Adam Levine, Historical Consultant. Philadelphia Water Department:


See also



References


  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed April 1, 2011
  2. "Destruction of an Historical Relic, The "Old Bake-house" on the Delaware Burned, New York Times, Dec. 10, 1865.
  3. Map showing sewerized tributary Archived 2007-03-11 at the Wayback Machine at MapTech.com
  4. "Pennsylvania Geological Survey". PaGEODE. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  5. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  6. Byberry-Bensalem Turnpike Bridge at BridgeHunter.com
  7. Red Lion Road Bridge at BridgeHunter.com
  8. Richlieu Road Bridge at BridgeHunter.com
  9. Century Lane Bridge at BridgeHunter.com
  10. Frankford Avenue Bridge at BridgeHunter.com
  11. Amtrak Northeast Corridor Bridge over Poquessing Creek at BridgeHunter.com
  12. Changes in the Names of Streams In and About Philadelphia ("Public Ledger Almanac: 1879". Pages 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, & 13)





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