, the nation's sixth largest city, is easily visible from the refuge. The
Lenape people are the first known settlers of the area that is now known as Philadelphia. The Lenape name for Tinicum Marsh was
Tennakon Minquas, or "islands of the marsh". The Lenape fished, hunted, and gathered in the land around the marshes until the mid-1600s, when European settlers colonized the area. Before the settlers' arrival, the
marshland spread for more than 5,000 acres. The settlers drained and filled the marshes to provide grazing and farming land. Over the years, as the city of Philadelphia grew, the marshes continued to disappear. By the 1950s, Tinicum Marsh had gone from more than 5,000 acres to only 200 acres. In the late 1760s, it was discovered by the Darby Society of Friends that the Elliot family was running a slave plantation on Smith Island. This was contrary to their orders of discipline. A committee of Nathan Garrett & William Horne were sent to negotiate a settlement. After at least 25 visits, Elliot and the visiting committee came to an agreement in 1765. He agreed to codify the agreement in his will. In his will, he gave a pension, a house, and 2 acres of land at Smith Field (now part of Tinicum Wildlife Preserve) to his slave Old Primus, who was freed immediately. He also provided for eight negroes besides Old Primus. Through the deal brokered by the Darby Friends Meeting and written into Enoch's will, they were to be manumitted when they reached 30 years of age. Their names were Frank, Joe, Betts, Rack, Young Primus, Dina, Peter and Nance. In the meantime, custody was split between his two sons. The will forbade that they be sold or hired out of the area. Enoch died in 1767. His son, Christopher, tried to circumvent the will and was sued by Quakers Thomas Shipley and Isaac Hopper, working through The Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society. In 1953, Allston Jenkins, a birdwatcher who lived in the
Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia, learned of
Gulf Oil's plans to dredge the
Schuylkill River and dump the spoils into the Marsh. He banded together with other birders and activists to form the Philadelphia Conservationists (later known as
Natural Lands, the region's oldest and largest land conservation organization). The group successfully fought the destruction of Tinicum Marsh and a non-tidal area of 145 acres, adjacent to the eastern end of Tinicum Marsh, was donated by the Gulf Oil Corporation to the City of Philadelphia in 1955. This area, administered for the benefit of wildlife and people, was known as Tinicum Wildlife Preserve. The areas of open water along with the adjacent heavily vegetated tidal wetlands, formed an ideal habitat for thousands of migratory birds. In 1969, threats to Tinicum Marsh continued to rise with the proposed routing of Interstate 95 through the marsh and the construction of a landfill. Local residents and organizations began to take action, as they had seen enough
habitat destruction done to the marshlands. They worked together to begin a long series of legal injunctions, public hearings, and extraordinary efforts that stopped both the highway's rerouting and the landfill's operation. In 1972, Congress passed legislation authorizing the protection of up to 1,200 acres and established Tinicum National Environmental Center. In 1991, the refuge was renamed posthumously to honor Senator John Heinz and his commitment to the conservation of the marsh. ==Topography==