The area was originally
Lenape Nation land, and while one popular explanation given for the name Moyamensing is "place of pigeon droppings," linguist
Raymond Whritenour links it to the
Southern Unami word
mwimënshink, meaning “place of wild black cherry trees.” A tract identified by the stream Moyamensink Kill was granted in 1664 by the
Dutch West India Company Lieutenant Alexander d'Hinoyossa, vice-director of
New Amstel to Marten Roseman (aka Marten Cleinsmit), William Stille and Lawrence Andries, and a 1680 survey identified the nearby swampy area as Moyamensic Marsh. In 1684, when the land was turned over from the
Dutch to the
English, the title was given by
William Penn to William Stille, Lassey Andrews, Andrew Bankson and John Matson. Moyamensing Township included this ground and
Wicaco, except such parts of the latter as were included in
Southwark. Its northern boundary was
South Street and below the existing parts of Southwark; its eastern boundary was the Delaware River, and its western boundary was Schuylkill Sixth (Seventeenth Street). In 1816, the greatest length of Moyamensing was estimated to be three miles; the greatest breadth, two miles; area, 2,560 acres (10 km). By act of March 24, 1812, the inhabitants of Moyamensing were incorporated by the style of "the commissioners and inhabitants of the township of Moyamensing" and they even had their own police force. By act of April 4, 1831, the township was divided into East and West Moyamensing. The township was one of the earliest created after the settlement of Pennsylvania, and became part of Philadelphia in 1854. ==References==