The 253 acres that make up the heart of present-day Garrett Hill were originally settled by the family of David James and Margaret Mortimer of Llandegley and Glascwm Parises of Radnorshire, Wales who arrived in
Pennsylvania on October 28, 1682 on board the sailing ship Bristol Factor that was captained by Roger Drew. The Bristol Factor was one of approximately 32 vessels chartered by
William Penn between 1681 and 1684, to ferry the Welsh Quakers from various parts of Wales across the
Atlantic Ocean to Pennsylvania for the purpose of establishing a Welsh Barony for Sir William Penn. In 1682, Garrett Hill lay in the heart of what was then known as The Welsh Tract. Radnor Township acquired its name because many of the settlers, such as the James family, had come directly from Radnorshire, Wales. When the James family arrived in the fall of 1682, they proceeded to present day Garrett Hill using dead reckoning, for the area at that time was still wilderness. David James had acquired "rights" to 100 acres where Garrett Hill stands today when he purchased an "indenture" to land in Welshpoole, Wales in the summer of 1682. The James family were literally the first inhabitants of Garrett Hill. They spent their first winter, 1682-1683, living in a cave near present-day Radnor United Methodist Church. In 1718, the James family acquired the rights to an additional 153 acres of Garrett Hill from David Meredith who, although not having previously occupied the land, had been declared lord over the land in 1708 by William Penn's land commissioners. 1n 1739, David James, the founder of Garrett Hill died and was buried in the cemetery that surrounds the Great Valley Baptist Church in Devon. His tombstone can be found there today. In 1776, two of David James' grandsons, Daniel James and Elias James, would serve on the Continental Line under General
George Washington in the
American Revolution. In 1777, Evan James would serve as a lieutenant in the 2nd Battalion, Chester County Pennsylvania Militia under the commanded of Colonel Evan Evans. During the Revolutionary War, the James Family Plantation was raided and occupied by the British Army, stripping the family farm of all its assets including food, livestock and household supplies as punishment for the family's service to the rebels. Following the war, the James family would receive a five-year tax amnesty for their service to the new nation. In 1780, local Methodists began meeting and studying at the James family plantation home, called the Old James Mansion. In 1783 David James' son, Evan James, would donate a half-acre of land memorializing where the family landed in 1682 to the Radnor United Methodist Church. Thereafter, the area acquired the name "Methodist Hill." Prior to that the area had been known as "James Hill." Not until the advent of the stone quarry and brickyard did Garrett Hill acquire the name by which it is known today. Once the area was industrialized, a community sprang up, consisting of residences for workers in proximity to the nearby stone quarry and brickyard (now both disappeared). The residents also worked at the estates, which were common in the area. ==Notable person==