Neshaminy Creek

{{Use American English|date=February 2025}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2017}}

{{Infobox river

| name = Neshaminy Creek

| native_name = {{native name|unm|Nishamening}}

| etymology = The place where we drink twice

| name_other =

| image = Neshaminy Creek in Tyler State Park.jpg

| image_size =

| image_caption = Neshaminy Creek in Tyler State Park

| image_alt =

| map = {{maplink|frame=yes|frame-align=center|frame-width=240|plain=yes|id=Q16895740|type=line|zoom=9|stroke-width=2|stroke-color=#0000FF}}

| map_size =

| map_caption = Map of Neshaminy Creek

| map_alt =

| pushpin_map =

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| subdivision_type1 = Country

| subdivision_name1 = United States

| subdivision_type2 = State

| subdivision_name2 = Pennsylvania

| subdivision_type3 = County

| subdivision_name3 = Bucks

| subdivision_type4 = Township

| subdivision_name4 = New Britain
Doylestown
Warwick
Buckingham
Wrightstown
Northampton
Newtown
Middletown
Lower Southampton
Bensalem
Bristol

| subdivision_type5 = Borough

| subdivision_name5 = Chalfont
New Britain
Langhorne
Hulmeville

| length = {{convert|40.7|mi|km}}

| width_min =

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| discharge1_location=

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| source1 =

| source1_location =

| source1_coordinates= {{Coord|40|16|59|N|75|12|19|W|}}

| source1_elevation = {{convert|220|ft|m}}

| mouth =

| mouth_location =

| mouth_coordinates = {{Coord|40|4|26|N|74|54|32|W|display=inline,title}}

| mouth_elevation = {{convert|0|ft|m}}

| progression = Neshaminy Creek → Delaware RiverDelaware Bay

| river_system = Delaware River

| basin_size = {{convert|232|sqmi|km2}}

| basin_landmarks = Wilma Quinlin Nature Preserve
Twin Streams Park
Lenape Bike and Hiking Path
Castle Valley Park
Central Park-Kids Castle
Bridge Point Park
Dark Hollow
Diamond Ridge Day Camp
Middle Bucks Institute of Technology
Tyler State Park
Bucks County Community College
George School
Core Creek Park
Playwicki Park
Playwicki Farm Park
Idlewood
Neshaminy State Park

| basin_population =

| tributaries_left = North Branch Neshaminy Creek
Cooks Run
Mill Creek
Newtown Creek
Core Creek

| tributaries_right = West Branch Neshaminy Creek
Mill Creek
Little Neshaminy Creek
Mill Creek

| waterbodies =

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| custom_label = Slope

| custom_data = {{convert|5.7|ft/mi|m/km}}

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}}

File:NeshaminyCreek.jpg

Image:Neshaminy Creek.jpg, the Neshaminy Creek runs mainly through wooded areas.]]

File:Bridge Valley Bridge PA 01.JPG (1804) on Neshaminy Creek, north of Hartsville.]]

Neshaminy Creek is a {{convert|40.7|mi|km|adj=mid|-long}}United States Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset. [http://viewer.nationalmap.gov/viewer/ The National Map], accessed April 1, 2011 stream that runs entirely through Bucks County, Pennsylvania, rising south of the borough of Chalfont, where its north and west branches join. Neshaminy Creek flows southeast toward Bristol Township and Bensalem Township to its confluence with the Delaware River.

The name "Neshaminy" originates with the Lenni Lenape and is thought to mean "place where we drink twice".MacReynolds, George, Place Names in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Doylestown, Bucks County Historical Society, Doylestown, PA, 1942, P1. This phenomenon refers to a section of the creek known as the Neshaminy Palisades, where the course of the water slows and changes direction at almost a right angle, nearly forcing the water back upon itself. These palisades are located in Dark Hollow Park,{{cite web |url=http://www.visitbuckscounty.com/listings/Dark-Hollow-Park/424/ |title=Dark Hollow Park |publisher=Visit Bucks County |access-date=6 May 2017}} operated by the county, and are flanked by Warwick Township to the south and Buckingham Township to the north.{{cite web |url=http://www.delawareriverkeeper.org/sites/default/files/resources/Factsheets/About_Dark_Hollow_Park.pdf |title=About Dark Hollow Park |publisher=Delaware Riverkeeper Network |access-date=6 May 2017}}

Statistics

The watershed of the Neshaminy Creek covers an area of approximately {{convert|236|sqmi}}, 86 percent of which is located in Bucks County and 14 percent in Montgomery County. It is part of the greater Delaware River watershed. The creek's course runs mostly through suburban areas to the north of Philadelphia. However, the course of the creek does run through a few sections of rural and semi-rural terrain, and some forested areas remain. Neshaminy Creek passes through two state parks, Tyler State Park and Neshaminy State Park. Neshaminy Creek has the distinction of having three tributaries named Mill Creek.

History

The name seems to derive from the Lenape 'Nesha-men-ning', loosely meaning 'the place where we drink twice' or 'two drinking places'. Older names were written as Nishambanach (1671), Nichmink, Nishammis (1679), Nishmines (1680), Neshimineh (1682), Neshamineh (1686), Neshaminia (1688), Neshamenah (1702), and others. This may refer to two springs near a village of the Lenape, since native people drink from a spring whenever available rather than from a stream. The location of the springs is unknown, but may have been two springs extant many years ago, not far from the confluence of the north and west branches. One was known at the time as the 'Great Spring' and the other much smaller about {{convert|300|ft|m}} away and was said to have been near an old Indian trail. The Neshaminy was the first stream in Bucks County to have been crossed by ferries and bridges.

The Gordon Gazetteer of 1832 called it the Neshaminy River and stated that "over it, there are many fine wooden and stone bridges. The bridge nearest its mouth on the road to New York is a draw bridge-in private property, erected by the Messrs. Bassonet and Johnson, whose heirs and assigns levy tolls by virtue of the Act of Assembly 6th Sept. 1785. The Neshaminy as far as Barnsleys Ford was declared a public highway by Act of 9th March, 1771."

The stream has seen a number of major floods, including after seasonal ice. In the Mina flood of 1833, most of the bridges were washed away and was the highest flood known at that time. Compared to the flood of 16–17 July 1865, the 1833 flood was exceeded by {{convert|6|ft|m}}, rupturing the Turk Dam and destroying almost all of the bridges downstream. As the waters reached the Delaware River, the flow was so great as to reach the New Jersey shoreline leaving a large pile of debris and preventing shipping from traversing the river. The Neshaminy has been the subject of many artists over the years.

Geology

Beginning at the junction of the West Branch and North Branch Neshaminy Creeks, Neshaminy Creek begins in the Brunswick Formation, formed during the Jurassic and Triassic, which consists of mainly mudstone, shale, and siltstone. Mineralogy includes argillite and hornfels. West of Chalfont it passes into an extension of the Lockatong Formation for a short distance, back into the Brunswick, then again to the Lockatong. The Lockatong Formation was deposited during the Triassic and consists of argillite, shale, and occasionally, a layer of limestone.

East of Chalfont, the Neshaminy flows into the Stockton Formation, laid during the Triassic, consisting of arkosic sandstone, sandstone, shale, siltstone, and mudstone. It flows generally along the Stockton and Lockatong transition until the Neshaminy palisades, where it turns west, then in a few miles turns south into a region of felsic gneiss, which contains quartz, microcline, pyroxene, and biotite.

After passing Oakford, it passes through a small deposit of mafic gneiss, from the Precambrian, which contains calcic plagioclase, hypersthene or augite, quartz, and hornblende.

Next, the stream passes into the Wissahickon Formation (lower Paleozoic), a schist which has metamorphosed into a facies, containing garnet, staurolite, kyanite, and sillimanite. The Wissahickon also contains oligoclase-mica schist, hornblende and augen gneiss', and some feldspar.

It then passes through a region of Pensauken and Bridgeton Formations, from the Tertiary, but it has eroded through it to the underlying Wissahickon Formation. Both formations consist of quartz sand.

Finally, the Neshaminy passes through the Trenton gravel formation, from the Quaternary, which is sand and clay-silt where it meets the Delaware River.

{{cite web

|url=https://www.gis.dcnr.state.pa.us/geology/index.html

|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140411084629/http://www.gis.dcnr.state.pa.us/geology/index.html

|url-status=dead

|archive-date=April 11, 2014

|title= Pennsylvania Geological Survey

|website=PaGEODE

|publisher=Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources

|access-date= 14 October 2017

}}

Named tributaries

Adjacent municipalities

Flooding

Like other rivers and streams, the Neshaminy Creek poses a flooding threat to neighboring areas in times of rapid downpours. The waters of the creek have been known to rise more than {{convert|10|ft|0}} above their normal level during severe storms, such as Hurricane Floyd, which hit the area on September 16, 1999. In 2005, the Natural Resources Conservation Service earmarked $3 million for flood mitigation programs along the Neshaminy Creek. The creek was the site of significant flooding again from June 25 through July 5, 2006, during the Mid-Atlantic United States flood of 2006. In late August through early September 2011, Hurricane Irene, and Tropical Storm Lee (2011) rose the Neshaminy Creek to levels which had not seen before in 100 years. Repairs cost around $1 million total.

Crossings and bridges

http://www.nationalbridges.com/ {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131031210639/http://nationalbridges.com/ |date=October 31, 2013 }}, retrieved October 2017.http://www.uglybridges.com/, retrieved October, 2017.

class="wikitable"
CrossingNBI NumberLengthLanesSpansMaterial/DesignBuiltReconstructedCoordinates
Bristol Road7218{{convert|47|m|ft}}23Prestressed Concrete Box Beam or Girders-single or spread1967{{coord|40|17|5|N|75|11|17.5|W}}
Upper State Road7537{{convert|71|m|ft}}23Prestressed concrete Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder1973{{coord|40|17|21|N|75|10|43.3|W}}
U.S. Route 20247700{{convert|160|m|ft}}24continuous Prestressed concrete Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder2012{{coord|40|16|54|N|75|10|30|W}}
Lower State Road46491{{convert|65|m|ft}}23continuous Prestressed concrete Box Beam or Girders - single or spread2012{{coord|40|17|10.3|N|75|9|38.55|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 611 (South Easton Road)7062{{convert|82|m|ft}}22Steel continuous Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder19631999{{coord|40|16|36.7|N|75|7|39.22|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 263 (York Road)6961{{convert|77|m|ft}}23continuous steel Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder19692017{{coord|40|16|32.5|N|75|5|1.9|W}}
Old York Road|
|{{coord|40|16|34|N|75|4|59|W}}
Mill Road7529{{convert|88|m|ft}}12Steel Thru Truss{{coord|40|16|9.8|N|75|4|26.8|W}}
Dark Hollow Road|
|{{coord|40|15|26|N|75|3|26|W}}
Rushland-Jamison Road7328{{convert|69|m|ft}}25Concrete Tee Beam19472013{{coord|40|15|37.8|N|75|2|7|W}}
New Hope Railroad|
|Steel girder1891|
|{{coord|40|15|18|N|75|1|56|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 232 (Second Street Pike)6956{{convert|79|m|ft}}23Prestressed concrete Stringer/Multi-beam or girder1982{{coord|40|15|3.7|N|75|0|31.7|W}}
Worthington Mill Road7330{{convert|75|m|ft}}22continuous Steel Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder1954{{coord|40|14|52|N|74|59|43.3|W}}
Schofield Ford Covered Bridge|
|{{coord|40|14|39|N|74|58|50|W}}
Tyler State Park Main Park Road|
|{{coord|40|13|54|N|74|58|26|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 332 (Newtown Richboro Road)44293{{convert|88|m|ft}}23continuous Prestressed concrete Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder2007{{coord|40|13|26.1|N|74|57|55.2|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 532 (Buck Road)7049{{convert|63|m|ft}}23Concrete Arch-deck1932{{coord|40|12|41.1|N|74|56|52.59|W}}
Bridgetown Pike41028{{convert|90|m|ft}}22continuous Steel Stringer or Multi-beam or Girder2001{{coord|40|11|21.47|N|74|55|40.6|W}}
Abandoned railroad|
|{{coord|40|10|34|N|74|57|23|W}}
Norfolk Southern Railway's Morrisville Line|
|{{coord|40|10|29|N|74|57|25|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 213 (West Maple Avenue)|
|{{coord|40|10|27|N|74|57|26|W}}
Brownsville Road7278{{convert|77|m|ft}}24Prestressed Concrete Box Beam or Girders-Multiple19561990{{coord|40|10|4.1|N|74|57|5.33|W}}
SEPTA's West Trenton Line/CSX Transportation's Trenton Subdivision|
|{{coord|40|8|53|N|74|57|26|W}}
Old Lincoln Highway7257{{convert|98.8|m|ft}}25Concrete Arch-Deck1921{{coord|40|8|44|N|74|57|25|W}}
U.S. Route 1 (Lincoln Highway)6719{{convert|97|m|ft}}23Concrete Arch-Deck19331965{{coord|40|8|42.6|N|74|57|15.52|W}}
Pennsylvania Route 513 (Hulmeville Road)7041{{convert|89|m|ft}}33Prestressed concrete continuous Box Beam or Girders-single or spread1989{{coord|40|8|28|N|74|54|45.84|W
}

|-

| Interstate 276 (Pennsylvania Turnpike)||-||-||-||-||-||-||-||{{coord|40|7|44|N|74|54|0|W}}

|-

| New Falls Road||-||-||-||-||-||-||-||{{coord|40|7|25|N|74|54|5|W}}

|-

| Interstate 95 (Delaware Expressway) southbound||6854||{{convert|181.4|m|ft}}||2||7||Prestressed concrete multi-beam or Girder||1964||2010||{{coord|40|6|15|N|74|54|9|W}}

|-

| Interstate 95 (Delaware Expressway) northbound||6851||{{convert|181.4|m|ft}}||2||7||Prestressed concrete multi-beam or Girder||1964||2010||{{coord|40|6|16|N|74|54|9|W}}

|-

| U.S. Route 13 (Bristol Pike)||-||-||-||-||-||-||-||{{coord|40|5|36|N|74|54|48|W}}

|-

| Amtrak's Northeast Corridor/SEPTA's Trenton Line||-||-||-||-||-||-||-||{{coord|40|5|33|N|74|54|49|W}}

|-

| State Road||-||-||-||-||-||-||-||{{coord|40|5|5|N|74|54|39|W}}

|}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}