The area on the "Pahkehoma" Creek was purchased by
William Penn from the
Lenni Lenape tribe in 1684 and eventually sold to Thomas Ruyard of London. In 1699 Edward Lane bought the land from Ruyard, and the purchase was confirmed by Penn in 1701. About 1706 the first section of the
Perkiomen Bridge Hotel was built on the west bank of the creek, just to the north of the current bridge site, then known as Phillips Ford. In 1728 the Lenni Lenape released their claim on land in the area for "two guns, six coats, six blankets, six duffel match coats, and four kettles," in effect selling the land again. A second hotel was built in the area by 1770, to accommodate the traffic between Philadelphia and Reading. Several wooden bridges, including a pontoon bridge, were built across the ford before 1797, but they were all destroyed within a few years by springtime flooding. The Pennsylvania Legislature approved a lottery in 1797 to raise funds for the bridge, eventually raising $20,000. The bridge was completed in 1799 at a cost of $60,000, opening on November 2. Increased road traffic followed the completion of the bridge, and with the start of regular stage coach service between Philadelphia and Reading, the
hotel next to the bridge became an overnight stop marking the halfway point of the trip.
Turnpikes were created from
Germantown to the east end of the bridge in 1804, and from the western end of the bridge to
Reading about 1816, but the trip across the bridge remained toll-free until 1867. In that year a toll booth was constructed on the western end of the bridge, and outraged residents burned it down before any tolls could be collected. In 1872 a toll booth was erected on the eastern end. This time residents obtained a court order prohibiting the collection of tolls within a mile of the bridge, then they burned down the toll booth. Trolley tracks were laid on the south side of the bridge in 1896, eventually connecting
Norristown to the south with
Trappe on the north. A historical society sued to keep the tracks off the bridge, but the trolley company built the tracks without permission, presenting the court with a
fait accompli. The trolleys ran until 1933. To avoid the necessity of curved approaches, the
American Automobile Association lobbied for the removal of the old bridge in 1938, to be replaced by a steel and concrete bridge. No major changes to the bridge occurred however and in the 1980s the new routing of US 422 removed much of the heavy traffic from the bridge. A
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission marker was erected by the bridge in 1947 and the bridge was listed on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1988. The Perkiomen Bridge Hotel adjacent to the bridge was listed separately on the National Register of Historic Places. Collegeville Bridge Morning II.jpg|Morning mist Perkiomen PA Bridge 1799.jpg|Bridge in 2011 ==See also==