Saxton was once a thriving town of several thousand people. Officially founded in 1855 by James Saxton, the area now known as Saxton has been inhabited for centuries. Before Anglos arrived,
Native Americans camped along the river that flows through the area. As the United States grew and pushed the frontier west, a few settlers began building homesteads, farms, and mills throughout the valley that Saxton is located in. The region being rich in
bituminous coal, a railroad was soon built to export the commodity. Saxton was the hub of the
Huntingdon and Broad Top Railroad (H&BT) and for almost 100 years it shipped coal from Saxton to places like
Bedford,
Huntingdon and
Everett. From there it went on to industrial centers, such as
Pittsburgh or
Baltimore. The thriving railroad attracted thousands of workers and their families to the town and surrounding area. In its heyday Saxton had a bowling alley, a toy factory, a candy factory, a coal power plant, dozens of shops and businesses, and even a
7 Up bottling plant. Saxton and the surrounding area were full of industry and other businesses. These included a
pig iron furnace,
coke ovens, a
tannery,
brickyards,
dairies, and others. However, the prosperity would not last, as the mines began to become exhausted of coal after
World War II. This in conjunction with the
recession of 1949 caused the railroad to shut down in 1955. Most of the buildings and infrastructure owned by the railroad were abandoned, and has subsequently been salvaged or left to erode away. Saxton was chosen to be the home of the
Saxton Nuclear Generating Station, the nation's fourth nuclear power plant, which was commissioned in 1961. It was one of the first test facilities for peace-time
plutonium use, as well as cooling methods that would be used to relieve meltdown situations such as the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011. The facility was decommissioned in 1972, and the radioactive core removed in 2005. ==Demographics==