The first recorded inhabitants of Nether Providence Township were
Native Americans of the
Lenape tribe, who lived in the area for about five hundred years, but by 1740 few remained. On August 14, 1682, two months before
William Penn's landing in
Chester, John Sharpless came to the area. Penn had given Sharpless a thousand-acre (4-km) tract, and he settled near Ridley Creek. , listed on the NRHP By the time Penn arrived, there were several small settlements in the area, which became known as Providence Township. Providence Township comprised today's Nether Providence,
Rose Valley,
Media, and
Upper Providence. On October 17, 1683, the residents of Providence Township petitioned the Court of Chester County, of which they were then a part, to establish a road from Providence to Chester. The court approved the creation of Providence Great Road (now
Route 252). Nether Providence went through four distinct phases from farming, to manufacturing, to resort, and finally, to residential community. By 1729, the area was producing sufficient crops to allow exporting to New England, Canada, and Europe. Fourteen major mill complexes were built in Nether Providence, six on Crum Creek and eight on Ridley Creek. The first, a cotton mill along Crum Creek, was started by Thomas Allen in 1763. He named his mill for his hometown,
Wallingford, England. The mills played an essential part in the growth of Nether Providence. Millhands lived in the self-contained villages that grew up around the mills. After the
Civil War, wealthy Philadelphians built summer residences and vacation resorts in the area. The first railway was the
Leiper Railroad, a horse-drawn quarry rail line, constructed in 1809–1810 and used to haul cut stone until about 1828. That early rail line was superseded by the
Leiper Canal. The first steam-locomotive train came through in 1854; it used a single track with a sidetrack at Wallingford. The first post office in Nether Providence was established at Hinkson's Corner in 1873.
Trolleys also contributed to the area's development. The first independent trolley was the Chester and Media Electric Railway, chartered in 1892. The last trolley through the township closed in 1938. The Nether Providence Police Department was established in 1935, and automobile parking was regulated in 1947 and speed in 1949. Three sites within the township,
Wolley Stille, the
Thomas Leiper Estate, and
Westlawn are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. ==Demographics==