Cobbs Creek

This article is about the creek that forms the border between Delaware County and Philadelphia. For the West Philadelphia neighborhood that takes its name, see Cobbs Creek, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Cobbs Creek
River
Cobbs Creek near Nitre Hall
Country USA
State Pennsylvania
Counties Philadelphia, Montgomery, Delaware
Tributaries
 - left Naylors Run, Indian Creek, Mingo Creek
 - right Thomas Run Creek, Paschall Creek
Cities Philadelphia, Upper Darby, Darby, Millbourne
Source Cobbs Creek
 - location Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA
 - elevation 1,540 ft (469 m)
 - coordinates 40°46′24″N 76°01′20″W / 40.77333°N 76.02222°W / 40.77333; -76.02222
Mouth Darby Creek
 - location Darby, Pennsylvania, USA
 - elevation 0 ft (0 m)
 - coordinates 39°54′23″N 75°15′11″W / 39.90639°N 75.25306°W / 39.90639; -75.25306Coordinates: 39°54′23″N 75°15′11″W / 39.90639°N 75.25306°W / 39.90639; -75.25306
Length 11.8 mi (19 km)
Basin 100 sq mi (259 km2)
Discharge for Darby
 - average 1,650 cu ft/s (47 m3/s)
 - max 50,200 cu ft/s (1,422 m3/s)
 - min 195 cu ft/s (6 m3/s)
Discharge elsewhere (average)
 - Darby 1,620 cu ft/s (46 m3/s)
Location of the mouth of Cobbs Creek in Pennsylvania

Cobbs Creek is an 11.8-mile-long (19.0 km)[1] tributary of Darby Creek in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It forms an approximate border between Montgomery County and Delaware County. After Cobbs Creek passes underneath Township Line Road (U.S. Route 1), it forms the border between Philadelphia County and Delaware County. It later joins Darby Creek before flowing into the Delaware River.[2]

History

Cobbs Creek in 1880

Cobbs Creek used to be called "Karakung" by Native Americans. This was the site of the historic Old Swede's Mill on the Karakong Kill which Governor Johan Printz, governor of New Sweden had built during 1645. It was the first water mill built within the limits of Pennsylvania. Its site may still be seen at the rocks on the east bank of the stream near the Blue Bell Inn on the road from Philadelphia to Darby. There were a few mills established around the portion of the river located along Karakung Drive in Haverford Township. Nitre Hall Powder Mills were built in the early 19th century along Cobb’s Creek on Karakung Drive. It was a center for manufacture for almost 200 years.[3][4]

Recreation

Where Cobbs Creek borders Philadelphia, it is surrounded by Cobbs Creek Park; a major section of Philadelphia's Fairmount Park System, the largest urban park in the country. Cobbs Creek Park contains three playgrounds: Cobbs Creek Recreation Center at Cobbs Creek Parkway and Spruce Street, Granahan playground at 65th and Callowhill streets, and Charles Papa Playground, a part of Morris Park in Overbrook, just north of Cobbs Creek Golf Course. For many in West Philadelphia, Cobbs Creek is the primary hiking and recreation attraction, offering swimming, golf, ball fields, tracks, tennis and basketball courts, ice and roller hockey rinks, and campgrounds. The park and its numerous picnic spaces are popular with families during summer weekends and holidays for picnics, barbecues, reunions and parties.[5]

Community impact

For many West Philadelphia and Upper Darby children, Cobbs Creek is their first introduction to wooded greenspaces and freshwater ecosystems. Local schools run service learning activities to support conservation in the creek and surrounding parks; e.g., conducting water-quality studies to track pollution. The wildlife includes regional birds, raccoons, opossums, spotted deer, wild turkey, rabbits, and in recent history, even a mountain lion.

Plans for an expressway up the Cobbs Creek valley began as early as 1930. Anticipated as part of a five-mile parkway system around Philadelphia, Cobbs Creek Expressway, designated I-695, would have begun at I-95 near Essington and connected with another expressway at Whitby Avenue in West Philadelphia. The proposals were abandoned in the mid-1970s after community objections.

The Frankford Creek has a similar impact for Cheltenham and North Philadelphia children.

Tributaries

See also

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed April 1, 2011
  2. Cobb's Creek in the Days of the Old Powder Mill
  3. Images of America:Haverford Township by the Haverford Township Historical Society ISBN 0-7385-1336-9
  4. Narratives Of early Pennsylvania west New Jersey and Delaware 1630-1707 (Edited By Albert Cook Myers. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1912) http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=6006509
  5. Philly H2O

External links

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