This neighborhood was built as a
streetcar suburb for
Center City between 1850 and 1910. Among its most prominent developers was financier
Clarence Howard Clark Sr. (1833 – 1906), who built dozens of rowhouses, donated land for the Walnut Street West Branch of the
Free Library of Philadelphia, settled a tax assessment by founding the 9.1-acre
Clark Park, and established his mansion on the grassy block that today holds the Penn Alexander public elementary school.
A statue of Charles Dickens, cast in 1890 by
Francis Edwin Elwell, stands in Clark Park; it is one of just two known statues of
Charles Dickens. After the high-profile killing of a
University of Pennsylvania research associate, Vladimir Sled, on October 31, 1996, at the 4300 block of Larchwood Avenue, community members advocated for more investment from the university in the neighborhood. The university's president at the time,
Judith Rodin, responded with the West Philadelphia Initiatives. The initiatives involved increased police presence, incentives for faculty buying homes in the neighborhood, and building a new school. In modern times, Spruce Hill is a racially and ethnically diverse part of the city, where multiple examples of historic architecture have been preserved, including a large number of
Victorian rowhouses, many of which have been converted to multi-family apartments. On July 12, 2024, the
Philadelphia Historical Commission approved the creation of a
historic district in the Southeast section of the neighborhood. The boundaries of the historic district runs roughly between 39th and 43rd streets from Spruce Street to Woodland Avenue. == Demographics ==