at Washington Square (location from 1908 to 1954) By the early 18th century the square started being used as a burial ground. Originally divided into triangles by two creeks, the northwestern portion was the
potter's field, and the southeastern section was for the burial of Catholics. The joining of the creeks created a fishing pond, and the grounds were commonly used for grazing by neighbors' cows. In 1776, it became the final resting place for
Washington's fallen soldiers. Long mass grave trenches the width of the square were first dug along 7th and Walnut Streets, and were eventually expanded to the South side. And during the British occupation of Philadelphia in 1777, the dead from the neighboring
Walnut Street Jail were also interred here. Many victims of the
city's yellow fever epidemic of 1793 were interred here, and the square was also used for cattle markets and camp meetings. The square was closed as a cemetery, and improvement efforts began in 1815, as the neighborhoods around the square were developed and became fashionable. In 1825, the park was named Washington Square in tribute to
George Washington and a monument to Washington was proposed. This monument was never built but served as the seed for the eventual tribute to soldiers of the Revolutionary War. The periphery of Washington Square included an area called Lawyer's Row at 6th and Walnut, on the site of the former Walnut Street Prison. Around the square was also home to the city's publishing industry, including the
Curtis Publishing Company,
J. B. Lippincott,
W. B. Saunders,
Lea & Febiger, the
Farm Journal, and George T. Bisel Co., law publishers, now the sole remaining publishing house on the square, with Franklin Jon Zuch serving as president since 1992. It has been located there since 1876 and still owned by the Bisel family. == American Civil War ==