History
William and Jane Yardley were among the first settlers on the
land to be known later as Makefield. The Yardleys were friends
of William Penn, and were in his "inner circle" since
Jane (Heath)Yardley's brother in law, JAMES HARRISON, was an advisor
to William Penn and steward of Pennsbury. William and Jane Yardley
and sons surveyed their land in September 1682 and named it "Prospect
Farm" on December 20, 1682. Later in the winter of 1702-03
most of the Yardley family died of small pox with the exception
of the wives of the Yardley brothers Enoch and Thomas. Thomas
Yardley's wife Hester was later remarried to RICHARD HOUGH, who
is credited with naming Makefield Township.
Hough, a provincial councilor, may have chosen the name Makefield
as an Americanization of the name "Macclesfield," his
native home in Cheshire, England. The Township of Makefield was
founded in 1692 when Bucks County appointed a grand jury to divide
the county into townships. The original five townships were Bensalem,
Bristol, Falls, Makefield and Middletown. Forty-five years later
the northern portion of the township was split off to form Upper
Makefield.
The 1693 census recorded a population of 100 persons and was
essentially devoted to farming. By 1810 the population had grown
to 1089 persons, and small villages were forming. The Reading
Railroad came to Lower Makefield in 1876, but the area remained
largely agricultural. However, all that changed after World War
II when the township's eighteen square miles were transformed
to a suburban community of residential homeowners.
It was with great foresight that the Township's founding fathers
created the first Zoning Ordinance in 1939 and the first Comprehensive
Township Master Plan in 1954. Continuous updating of these documents
has provided for growth in an orderly fashion to preserve the
quality of life in Lower Makefield.