Updated: 8/25/2012 
John Brown Tannery Site
New Richmond, Pennsylvania
Description

Located in the village of New Richmond, about 13 miles northeast of the city of Meadville, in Crawford County, PA, the John Brown tannery site is on the National Register of Historic Places. It is 850 feet south of state Route 77 on John Brown Road.

The half-acre site retains the foundation walls of a tannery built by John Brown decades before he became famous for his 1859 attempt to incite a slave uprising at Harpers Ferry, W. Va. He used the building for tanning animal hides into leather.

The site features all-weather display panels that interpret his contributions to the settlement of the county and his role in national events leading to the American Civil War. The site is open year round to the public without charge and is owned by the John Brown Heritage Association.

Services

Visitors to the tannery site and museum are welcome. At this place -- amid the old stonework of the tannery walls, the peaceful ponds and woods framing the farm, the tombstones that recall family bonds and sorrows -- ponder the legacy of John Brown, a pioneer American settler and a symbol of the struggle over slavery that exploded into the Civil War.

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