| History of Ross Township
Ross Township was named after an
assistant judge of the Pennsylvania State Supreme Court. In 1817 Ross
Township was formed from a division of Chestnuthill Township and named
after a very prominent citizen, Judge John Ross of Easton, Pennsylvania.
John Ross was appointed Assistant Judge of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1825. He had lived on the Ross Common
Manor Estate (located south of Saylorsburg) which was originally built
in 1787 by his father, Jessie Ross of Bucks Township, who used it as a
hunting lodge. John Ross died in 1834 and today is interred at a small
family cemetery located on the Ross Common property.
Ross Township grew as settlers passed
north through the Wind Gap pass in the 1700’s. Saylor’s Lake, a natural
lake, became a summer resort and the location of a winter ice cutting
industry. A major brick factory also operated in Saylorsburg in the late
1800s and early 1900s.
Ross Township, has major sites and structures that have
historical significance. These places have been identified by the Monroe
Township Planning Commission as part of its Township-wide inventory of
historical sites and structures.
These historic places
represent a presence of the past. They add charm and interest to Ross
Township and the West End, and every effort must be taken to insure
their continued protection and preservation in the future.
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