Special Report
100 Towns Founded Before the American Revolution
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Do you know just how old your town is? The United States is a relatively young nation, but some American towns have been around for over three centuries, and some longer still. They contain rich histories and have been home to over a dozen generations.
Throughout New England, the Mid-Atlantic and the South; From Kittery, Maine — founded in 1647 — to St. Augustine, Florida — founded in 1565, there are towns and cities with pasts that stretch back much further even than this country’s independence.
24/7 Wall St. selected 100 towns that were founded, chartered, established, or incorporated before the American Revolutionary War.
Click here to see 100 American towns founded before the American Revolution
Click here to see our detailed findings and methodology
The historical towns on this list got their start in different ways. Some, such as Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and Providence, Rhode Island, were founded as refuges for those fleeing political and religious persecution in Europe and the American colonies. Others got their start as trading posts that eventually received charters from English royalty.
By the time of the Revolutionary War, colonial America was already very well established, with millions of people living in thousands of small to medium-sized settlements. This list is not meant to be an attempt to provide a comprehensive tally of every town founded before the American Revolution. Due primarily to a lack of documentation, identifying every town founded prior to 1776 would prove nearly impossible. From a repository of several hundred towns, we compiled a list of 100 pre-Revolutionary War towns that we believe represent the diversity of the American experience.
It is important to note that these founding dates only include colonial settlements. Many of these towns, or the areas where they were established, had been settled and occupied by Native Americans long before European settlers arrived. The interaction between the newcomers and the local population often dictated the future course of the towns that still exist today.
The oldest city in America was founded 11 days after Spanish explorer Pedro Menéndez de Avilés landed in what is now Florida on the feast day of St. Augustine.
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2. Jamestown, Virginia
> Founded: 1607
> Population: 10,333
This is where the first permanent English colony in North America was established. It was named for King James.
3. Santa Fe, New Mexico
> Founded: 1610
> Population: 82,927
Santa Fe was founded by Spanish conquistadors, including Don Pedro de Peralta. Santa Fe is the oldest European settlement west of the Mississippi River.
4. Hampton, Virginia
> Founded: 1610
> Population: 136,789
Founded by English settlers, Hampton is located at mouth of James River.
5. Albany, New York
> Founded: 1614
> Population: 98,425
Dutch fur traders established the first European settlement in New York.
6. Plymouth, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1620
> Population: 58,216
Plymouth is where the Pilgrims landed after crossing the Atlantic to escape religious persecution in England. The first Thanksgiving celebration took place here.
7. New York, New York
> Founded: 1624
> Population: 8,461,961
Settled by the Dutch in 1624, the English took over in 1664 and named the town New York.
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8. Salem, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1626
> Population: 42,804
Salem, famous for the witch trials in the late 17th century, was founded by colonial settlers.
9. Boston, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1630
> Population: 658,279
A group of 1,000 Puritan refugees lead by John Winthrop and Thomas Dudley.
10. Cambridge, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1630
> Population: 108,757
Cambridge was settled by the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Originally called New Towne, the name Cambridge was adopted in 1638.
11. Portsmouth, New Hampshire
> Founded: 1630
> Population: 21,458
Portsmouth was a sanctuary for those fleeing religious persecution in Massachusetts.
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12. Lewes, Delaware
> Founded: 1631
> Population: 2,955
Located on Delaware Bay, it was first settled by the Dutch.
13. Windsor, Connecticut
> Founded: 1633
> Population: 29,044
Windsor was Connecticut’s first English settlement.
14. Wethersfield, Connecticut
> Founded: 1634
> Population: 26,396
One of Connecticut’s oldest towns settled by the English. Wethersfield experienced witch-trial hysteria in the 17th century.
15. Concord, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1635
> Population: 17,668
One of the places where the Revolutionary War began, Concord was settled by English colonists.
16. Hartford, Connecticut
> Founded: 1636
> Population: 124,320
Puritans led by the Rev. Thomas Hooker created a settlement on the Connecticut River.
17. Providence, Rhode Island
> Founded: 1636
> Population: 178,851
Roger Williams, banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for radical views, bought land from Native Americans and founded Providence.
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18. Scituate, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1636
> Population: 5,471
Scituate was settled by people from the county of Kent in England. Scituate is derived from the Native American word Satuit, meaning “cold brook.”
19. New Haven, Connecticut
> Founded: 1638
> Population: 130,405
Founded by Puritans, New Haven was one of America’s first planned towns.
20. Exeter, New Hampshire
> Founded: 1638
> Population: 9,022
Town founder Reverend John Wheelwright was an exile from Puritan Massachusetts. He bought land from Native Americans for the settlement.
21. Swedesboro, New Jersey
> Founded: 1638
> Population: 2,606
A southern New Jersey town was founded by a group of Swedes and Finns.
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22. Newport, Rhode Island
> Founded: 1639
> Population: 24,570
Founded by English settlers led by strong-willed Anne Hutchinson, who was driven out of Massachusetts for her religious views.
23. Guilford, Connecticut
> Founded: 1639
> Population: 22,375
Native Americans sold land to Puritans led by Henry Whitfield.
24. Fairfield, Connecticut
> Founded: 1639
> Population: 59,404
Fairfield one of the four earliest towns founded by the English in Connecticut in the 17th century.
25. Braintree, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1640
> Population: 37,066
Braintree, named after the English town, was called Monoticut, an Algonquian word meaning “abundance.”
26. Stamford, Connecticut
> Founded: 1641
> Population: 127,410
Founded by Puritans, Stamford became a manufacturing hub early on in history and is now home to multinational corporations.
27. Warwick, Rhode Island
> Founded: 1642
> Population: 81,881
Samuel Gorton founded Warwick after he bought the land from the Narragansett Native Americans.
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28. Chester, Pennsylvania
> Founded: 1644
> Population: 34,056
Originally settled in 1644 by the Swedes, Quakers led by William Penn made it a colonial settlement in 1681. Chester is the oldest city in Pennsylvania.
29. Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1645
> Population: 5,136
Manchester-by-the-Sea, backdrop to many movies, was founded by English settlers. The name changed in 1990 to distinguish it from other Manchesters.
30. Yonkers, New York
> Founded: 1646
> Population: 199,725
Dutch founder Adrian Van der Donck was the first lawyer in New Netherlands colony that would become New York in 1644.
New London, founded by English settlers, was the Connecticut colony’s first official port.
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32. Andover, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1646
> Population: 9,194
English settlers from Andover, England settled in this part of Massachusetts. Andover is home to the prestigious prep school Phillips Academy.
33. Kittery, Maine
> Founded: 1647
> Population: 4,704
Kittery is the first incorporated town in Maine.
34. Marblehead, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1649
> Population: 20,363
The first non-Native American settlers were British subjects who came to present-day Marblehead from Salem to escape religious oppression from the Puritans.
35. Annapolis, Maryland
> Founded: 1649
> Population: 39,009
Home to the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis was settled by the Puritans and originally called Providence.
36. New Castle, Delaware
> Founded: 1651
> Population: 5,372
New Castle was founded by the Dutch under Peter Stuyvesant. The original name of the town was Fort Casimir.
37. Chelmsford, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1655
> Population: 33,802
Chelmsford was founded by colonists from Concord and Woburn. It is located 24 miles north of Boston.
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38. Staten Island, New York
> Founded: 1661
> Population: 475,558
The Dutch established a colony there in 1661. Staten Island derives from the Dutch name, Staaten Eylandt. The English seized the area in 1664 and renamed the Island in honor of the Duke of Richmond.
39. Stonington, Connecticut
> Founded: 1662
> Population: 973
Stonington was founded by Governor John Winthrop, Jr. who obtained a charter from England.
40. Elizabeth, New Jersey
> Founded: 1664
> Population: 128,042
English immigrants founded the settlement — originally called Elizabethtown — after buying the land from the Lenni Lenape Native Americans.
41. Greenwich, Connecticut
> Founded: 1665
> Population: 13,429
Settlers from Massachusetts were the first to purchase the patch of land that is now Greenwich, right between the Asamuck and Patomuck rivers.
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42. Lyme, Connecticut
> Founded: 1667
> Population: 2,406
Lyme was named after Lyme Regis in England. The town separated from Saybrook in 1665 and was named Lyme in 1667.
43. Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan
> Founded: 1668
> Population: 13,941
Sault Ste. Marie was founded by French settlers and is the oldest city in Michigan.
44. Charleston, South Carolina
> Founded: 1670
> Population: 129,888
King Charles II of England gave the Carolina territory to eight friends who helped restore the monarchy.
45. Edgartown, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1671
> Population: 649
Settled by English immigrants Thomas Mayhew Sr. and his son Thomas Jr.
46. Nantucket, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1671
> Population: 7,830
Nantucket was populated by the Wampanoag Native American tribe until the land was deeded to Thomas Mayhew Sr.and his son.
47. Derby, Connecticut
> Founded: 1675
> Population: 12,755
English fur traders were among the first Europeans in the area. Native American tribes such as the Paugassetts and the Pootatucks had inhabited the area long before the English.
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48. Peoria, Illinois
> Founded: 1680
> Population: 115,990
French explorers including Robert Cavalier Sieur de LaSalle founded Peoria, Illinois. Peoria is the name of the predominant Native American tribes in the Illinois confederacy.
49. Ysleta, Texas
> Founded: 1680
> Population: 9,232
Ysleta, now a section of El Paso, was founded by Franciscan missionaries and Spanish settlers.
50. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
> Founded: 1682
> Population: 1,559,938
William Penn and the Quakers founded Philadelphia as a place of religious tolerance.
A Spanish mission was established here after a Native American claimed to have seen a burning cross on the mountain of Presidio.
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52. Princeton, New Jersey
> Founded: 1683
> Population: 30,168
Representatives of East Jersey and West Jersey met at a tavern to establish their boundary in 1683. From these negotiations emerged various counties and towns, including the western border of Princeton Township.
53. Waterbury, Connecticut
> Founded: 1686
> Population: 109,211
Waterbury took its official name in 1686 when it was admitted as the 28th town in the colony of Connecticut.
54. Falmouth, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1686
> Population: 3,730
Quakers led by Isaac Robinson settled the area. Falmouth takes its name from a town in England.
55. Danbury, Connecticut
> Founded: 1687
> Population: 83,890
English settlers migrated from Norwalk to Danbury, which was nicknamed Beantown for the proliferation of beans and other vegetables that grew there.
56. Kingston, New York
> Founded: 1688
> Population: 23,506
The Dutch and English battled for control of the region and the English prevailed. A grant establishing Kingston was approved in 1688.
57. Newark, New Jersey
> Founded: 1693
> Population: 280,139
New Jersey’s largest city was founded by Puritan settlers who left Connecticut and bought land from the Hackensack Native Americans.
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58. Biloxi, Mississippi
> Founded: 1699
> Population: 45,271
French explorers led by Pierre Le Moyne, Sieur d’Iberville landed on the mainland at present-day Biloxi and established a settlement.
59. Lebanon, Connecticut
> Founded: 1700
> Population: 7,308
Lebanon was formed by a consolidation of various tracts of land, some of which were held by Native Americans, that were incorporated into one town.
60. Mobile, Alabama
> Founded: 1702
> Population: 193,717
The French established a permanent presence in 1702. Mobile was the oldest permanent settlement in the original Colony of French Louisiana and was its first capital before the French lost the region to the French and Indian War.
Groton was first settled by the English as part of New London. It became its own incorporated town in 1705.
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62. Bath, North Carolina
> Founded: 1705
> Population: 249
French Protestants from Virginia were the first to settle in Bath.
63. Brookline, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1705
> Population: 59,180
Brookline, the birthplace of John F. Kennedy, was founded by English settlers. It separated from Boston in 1705.
64. Albuquerque, New Mexico
> Founded: 1706
> Population: 556,859
Spanish colonists were given permission by King Philip of Spain to establish a city.
65. Chestertown, Maryland
> Founded: 1706
> Population: 5,122
A British act promoting trade helped create Chestertown in the early 18th century.
66. Beaufort, North Carolina
> Founded: 1709
> Population: 4,039
Beaufort, founded by the English, was once the stomping ground of the pirate Blackbeard.
67. New Bern, North Carolina
> Founded: 1710
> Population: 30,075
New Bern, the birthplace of the soft drink Pepsi Cola, was founded by Baron Christopher de Graffenried of Switzerland.
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68. Pembroke, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1711
> Population: 18,166
English settlers founded Pembroke, which claims to be the first colonial town to publicly rebel against the British Empire.
69. Lexington, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1713
> Population: 32,936
Lexington, where the Revolution began, was carved out of the agricultural region called Cambridge by colonists.
70. Oxford, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1713
> Population: 5,927
Oxford was initially settled by the French Protestant Huguenots. It is also the birthplace of Clara Barton, the founder of the American Red Cross.
French settlers led by Louis Juchereau de St. Denis founded the city, near the Natchitoches Native American village on the Red River.
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72. Natchez, Mississippi
> Founded: 1716
> Population: 15,345
First settled by the French, Natchez is the oldest city established along the Mississippi River.
73. New Orleans, Louisiana
> Founded: 1718
> Population: 382,922
New Orleans, the “Crescent City,” was founded by French settlers.
74. San Antonio, Texas
> Founded: 1718
> Population: 1,439,358
San Antonio got its name from Spanish settlers in 1691, but the city was not founded until 1718, when its first mission and first presidio were established.
75. Trenton, New Jersey
> Founded: 1719
> Population: 84,559
The city is named after one its leading landowners, William Trent, and was called “Trent-towne.”
76. Walpole, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1724
> Population: 6,209
Walpole was settled by colonists and was named after pro-colonist British prime minister Sir Robert Walpole.
77. Kaskaskia, Illinois
> Founded: 1725
> Population: 20
The French incorporated the town that was given special rights by King Louis XV. Kaskaskia is located on Kaskaskia Island.
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78. Provincetown, Massachusetts
> Founded: 1727
> Population: 2,680
Pilgrims landed in Provincetown Harbor and stayed in the area for five weeks before traveling on to Plymouth. The first permanent settlement in Provincetown was established nearly 100 years later.
79. Vincennes, Indiana
> Founded: 1732
> Population: 18,098
French fur traders founded Vincennes, the oldest city in Indiana.
80. Savannah, Georgia
> Founded: 1733
> Population: 144,717
English settlers led by General James Oglethorpe founded Savannah, which became Georgia’s first city.
Ste. Genevieve was founded by French-Canadians. It was part of the “Illinois Country” that was in the region of the territory held by the French in North America.
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82. Richmond, Virginia
> Founded: 1737
> Population: 216,773
Richmond, named after a suburb of London, was founded in 1737 by Colonel William Byrd II after visiting the site four years earlier.
83. Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
> Founded: 1741
> Population: 75,110
A small group of Moravians, a Protestant denomination seeking religious freedom, settled on the banks of the Lehigh River and established a town.
84. Coventry, Rhode Island
> Founded: 1741
> Population: 35,014
Colonists led by Samuel Gorton purchased land from the Miantonomi Native Americans and incorporated the land into a township named for Coventry, England.
85. Nashua, New Hampshire
> Founded: 1746
> Population: 87,279
The first settlers in Nashua were colonial English land speculators and soldiers. There was much fighting between the colonists and Native Americans in this region.
86. Bennington, Vermont
> Founded: 1749
> Population: 8,945
Bennington was the first Vermont town to receive a town grant when it was chartered by Governor Benning Wentworth. Bennington was the first town settled west of the Green Mountains.
87. Alexandria, Virginia
> Founded: 1749
> Population: 151,473
Scottish and English merchants wanted to improve shipping in the region and they petitioned the Virginia General Assembly to create a town, which became Alexandria.
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88. Westminster, Vermont
> Founded: 1751
> Population: 307
Westminster, founded by English colonists, was part of New York before it became part of Vermont. It is the oldest town in Vermont.
89. Grafton, Vermont
> Founded: 1754
> Population: 679
The town was founded in 1754 and was originally called Thomlinson, after English business agent John Thomlinson. It was later changed to Grafton.
90. Hanover, New Hampshire
> Founded: 1761
> Population: 8,482
Colonists from Connecticut were granted a charter for about seven square miles to create a town that would become the home of Dartmouth College.
Colonial settlers migrating into Shenandoah Valley founded Shepherdstown.
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92. Romney, West Virginia
> Founded: 1762
> Population: 2,301
Romney was founded by colonial settlers and is West Virginia’s oldest town.
93. Allentown, Pennsylvania
> Founded: 1762
> Population: 119,624
Allentown was originally called Northamptontown by its founder William Allen, chief justice of colonial Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court.
94. Charlotte, North Carolina
> Founded: 1768
> Population: 808,834
Colonists named the town after King George III’s wife, Charlotte, who was born in Germany.
95. San Diego, California
> Founded: 1769
> Population: 1,374,812
San Diego was founded by Spanish missionaries and it was the first settlement by Europeans in what would become California.
96. Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin
> Founded: 1770s
> Population: 5,771
Prairie du Chien was founded by French missionaries, explorers, and fur traders.
97. Ellicott, Maryland
> Founded: 1772
> Population: 70,780
Brothers Joseph, Andrew, and John Ellicott who were Quakers founded Ellicott’s Mills after buying property west of Baltimore.
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98. Harrodsburg, Kentucky
> Founded: 1774
> Population: 8,409
Harrodsburg was founded by James Harrod, making the town one of the oldest English settlements west of the Allegheny Mountains.
99. Tucson, Arizona
> Founded: 1775
> Population: 527,586
Tucson was founded by Irishman Hugh O’Conor for the Spanish crown. The settlement was originally called San Agustin de Toixon, a name shortened and modified to Tucson.
100. Lexington, Kentucky
> Founded: 1775
> Population: 311,529
American colonists gave the town its name in honor of Battle of Lexington in Massachusetts,the first battle to kick off the American Revolutionary War.
The vast majority of towns that were founded before 1776 are located in a handful of states in the Northeast. Massachusetts and Connecticut have by far the most towns incorporated prior to the Revolutionary War. On our list of 100, 20 towns are in Massachusetts and 16 in Connecticut. Fewer than 10 towns on our list founded before 1776 are in states west of Louisiana.
Only 30 states are home to towns that were founded before the Revolutionary War, and all 30 states are represented in this selection of 100 towns. For each town we listed the date when it was founded, established, chartered, or incorporated.
While the definitions of these terms can be ambiguous depending on the source, the date when a town was founded, established, or chartered all appear to precede the date when the place was incorporated as a town.
Some of the biggest cities in the country are on the list, among them New York City, San Antonio, and Philadelphia. Many towns on the list have fewer than 1,000 people, and one — Kaskaskia, Illinois — has just 20 residents.
The oldest towns you read about in geography class in school — Jamestown, Virginia; Plymouth, Massachusetts; and St. Augustine, Florida — are also on the list as well. It is worth noting that recent research strongly suggests that Pensacola, Florida, might predate St. Augustine as the oldest settlement in the United States by five years.
To be considered, pre-Revolutionary War towns needed to have been chartered, founded, established, or incorporated before 1776 and have remained in continuous existence. Population figures were obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2016 American Community Survey and are five-year averages. For the 12 towns on this list not tracked by the ACS, we used population figures as of the 2010 Census, the latest available. Lexington, Kentucky, is more commonly referenced as Lexington-Fayette urban county, Kentucky. Swedesboro, New Jersey is also referred to as Swedesboro, borough, Braintree, New Jersey is referred to as the Town of Braintree, and Westminster, Vermont also appears as Westminster village.
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