Before
European settlers arrived the valley was home to a tribe of
Lenape Native Americans, who gave Oley its name. In the Lenape's
Unami language, "Olink" means Bowl, which is roughly the shape of the valley, which was an important meeting place for Native Americans.
The Sacred Oak, which is located about one mile (1.6 km) from Main Street is an
oak tree that is over 500-years-old, where the Lenape made treaties and settled differences. The first
European settlers arrived in the Oley Valley in the early 1700s. The settlers were primarily
German along with French
Huguenots and Swiss seeking religious freedom. One of the Valley's early residents was Mordecai Lincoln, the great-grandfather of
Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of United States. The Lincoln Homestead can still be seen and visited in what is now Exeter Township. The
Moravian Church had a congregation for a time in Oley and operated one of the first schools in the area. The first settler, named John Palmer Fleck of
Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, moved to the Maxatawny region of the Oley Valley. When they arrived, they found prosperous Lenape villages and fields of
corn. The settlers and the Native Americans existed peacefully for many years with some of the Indians converting to
Christianity. However, when the
French and Indian War began relations between the settlers and the Lenape became strained. One day it was reported that a nearby farmer had been killed by Indians and the entire town gathered in the largest house. That night, sentries were posted and all men with their
muskets were positioned at small firing ports cut in the building's wall. The next morning, a man was seen walking down the road, who at first was perceived to be an Indian but turned out to be the farmer who had supposedly been murdered. The farmer had no knowledge of his supposed death and informed the townspeople that in the middle of the night all the Lenape had disappeared from the Oley Valley. It is believed that Native Americans of the Valley left to fight in the war although it is still a mystery since none of them ever returned. The Indians' dwellings were left standing and undisturbed for many years until the last house collapsed in 1856. Another one of the Valley's early residents was the Boone family.
Daniel Boone the famous pioneer was born in Oley in 1734. Oley played an important role during the early days of the
Revolutionary War. During
George Washington's encampment at
Valley Forge, Oley's farmers sent large amounts of food along with cannonballs made at the Oley Furnace to bolster Washington's
Continental Army. One of the most prominent people in the history of early Oley was Mountain Mary Originally named Anna Maria Jung, she was a
German immigrant who practiced
pow-wow, also known as
Braucherei, and she had an extensive understanding of
herbal remedies for various ailments. Jung was a resource for those seeking advice and offered remedies and comfort to the sick. She kept one cow and did her own baking and some light farming, common for the era, but made her income primarily by keeping bees and making butter. Her secluded log cabin was located on a ridge above
Pikeville, where she lived a reclusive life with her two sisters, no longer stands, but her spring house on a farm along Mountain Mary Road is still standing. The
1790 census, the nation's first, lists Mountain Mary as an "abbess," suggesting that her home was seen as a kind of convent. She became ill, and died in November 1819. The
Annals of Oley Valley were written in 1926 and continue to be a genealogical resource to this day. The town was originally named "Friedensburg" but that was changed after World War II because it was too often confused with a different Friedensburg PA located farther north. Prior to
World War II,
Pennsylvania Dutch was still the primary language of the native residents. After the war use of the language decreased and today it is only fluently spoken by the older residents of the valley. Even though the language is almost gone a strong heritage remains among the people of the valley.
Wallace Stevens, the American poet, was raised in
Reading, and the Oley Valley influenced some of his poetry. Stevens' poem "Credences of Summer", published in his 1947 collection
Transport to Summer, makes reference to Ole Valley: ==Community==