Brown Township, named for Major General
Jacob Brown of the
War of 1812, was formed on May 3, 1815, by the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace of Lycoming County, from parts of
Mifflin and
Pine townships.
Pine Creek and its gorge divide the township nearly in half, and it is the center of history in Brown Township. Pine Creek was a major waterway in the settlement of north-central Pennsylvania and in the lumber era that swept through Pennsylvania in the mid-to-late 19th century. Early pioneers were attracted to its remoteness and abundance of fish and game. Jacob Lamb, formerly of
Milton, was the first documented European descendant to settle in the area. He arrived in late 1794 by paddling with his family and household supplies in ten canoes, up the
West Branch Susquehanna River and Pine Creek to the mouth of
Slate Run. Here, Lamb built his home. Jacob Lamb also constructed the first
saw and
gristmills in the area. Driving the local economy toward the end of the century was the James B. Weed and Company
hemlock sawmill, which operated in Slate Run from 1886 to 1910 and produced up to 100,000
board feet of lumber a day. After the end of the lumber era, the mill closed, and the village declined in size. However, in the early 21st century, Slate Run still has a general store and post office, and a hotel with a restaurant and bar. ==Geography==