Dreshertown developed around a sawmill and gristmill built by John Kirk sometime before 1750. George Dresher bought the mill about 1780 and the family owned it for 54 years. The Dreshers began a small burial ground next to their residence. The Dreshertown Cemetery is mostly descendants of Christopher Dresher, an early
Schwenkfelder immigrant. The family left
Silesia, a province in the
German kingdom of
Prussia, in 1726 to escape religious persecution as Schwenkfelders. They first landed in
England, and in 1734, left
Plymouth, England, and arrived in
Philadelphia with their children, Christopher and Anna, on the St. Andrews, one of three ships carrying Schwenkfelders, Bean's 1884
History of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania describes Dreshertown as follows: "Dreshertown is situated at the intersection of the Limekiln turnpike with the Susquehanna Street road, and equidistant from Fitzwatertown and Jarrettown. As these two highways are ancient, they must denote an early settlement. It contains a store, grist-mill and eleven houses. A post-office was established here in 1832..." An old blacksmith shop stood at the corner of Dresher Road and
Limekiln Pike. Francis Houpt ran a general store beginning in 1871 at the village center: the triangle formed by Peg Street, Susquehanna Road and Limekiln Pike. In the 1880s, the McCormick Brothers were wheelwrights and blacksmiths at a shop at this intersection that was owned first by Michael Carolan (1844-1906), an Irish immigrant born near
Kells,
County Meath, who came, at age three, with his family to New York aboard the
Patrick Henry. The
Pennsylvania Railroad built a line through Dreshertown in 1888 and a station stood where Susquehanna Road and Limekiln Pike cross. ==Geography==