Nicetown-Tioga, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Nicetown-Tioga is a neighborhood in the North Philadelphia section of the city of Philadelphia, in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. It comprises two smaller, older neighborhoods, Nicetown and Tioga, although the distinction between the two is rarely emphasized today. The name "Nicetown" is often simply used to refer to any part of Nicetown-Tioga.

Contents

Geography

Boundaries

Nicetown-Tioga overall

The boundaries of Philadelphia neighborhoods are often not universally agreed upon. There are no "official" boundaries to the Nicetown-Tioga area, but some possible boundaries are:

This makes Wayne Junction station the northernmost tip of Nicetown-Tioga.

PCPC's definition of Nicetown

The Philadelphia City Planning Commission (PCPC) defines Nicetown itself (not Nicetown-Tioga overall) as a much smaller area bounded by Wingohocking Street, Broad Street, Hunting Park Avenue, and Clarissa Street.[1]

PCPC's definition of Tioga

The Philadelphia City Planning Commission (PCPC) defines Tioga itself (not Nicetown-Tioga overall) as a smaller area bounded by Broad Street, Hunting Park Avenue, the railroads [exact western boundary unclear], and Allegheny Avenue.[2]

ZIP code

The 19140 ZIP code includes both Nicetown-Tioga and Hunting Park.

History and economy

1700 to 1850

Nicetown began centuries ago as a small town in what was then rural Philadelphia County, outside the City of Philadelphia (which occupied the area known today as Center City). Mease notes that Nicetown was named for Hans te Neues, a Mennonite immigrant who purchased the land of present-day Nicetown in 1699. Family legend among the Nice/Nyce family states that Hans threw a bottle of schnaps over his first house to christen it. This original early 18th century structure burned in 1800. Hans and his brother Jan had immigrated from Amsterdam in 1698, Jan settling in Germantown. Both were ministers in the Mennonite faith, meaning that they could read and write. Hans and his descendants were well known as zimmermen (builders of houses). One descendant was a member of the Carpenter's Society of Philadelphia in the early 1800s. Another, was Captain John Nice of Germantown, who led the charge at the Battle of Germantown during the Revoluntionary War. Other authors have varied suggestions for the origin of Nicetown. Finkel[3] says that it was "[n]amed for de Neus, Dutch Huguenots who settled there about 1700". Other sources seem to agree that the area was named for a family of early settlers whose surname sounded more or less like /�$B�(Ba�$B�(B/. Other spellings seen for the same surname are Neiss, Neisse, and, of course, the Nice seen in the placename Nicetown. There are 19th-century headstones in nearby Germantown marked with the surname Nice. (Regarding the orthographical "correctness" of surnames and placenames, it is important to remember that in the surnames and placenames of past centuries, orthography was often second to pronunciation. Witness the names of the nearby Tookany/Tacony Creek.)

Tioga is a placename used in various places. According to several sources,[4][5] "Tioga" is a Mohawk and Iroquois word referring to a place where a stream or river current forks or runs swiftly. The name has been used in North Philadelphia since at least the mid-19th century.[6] Perhaps it was inherited from the Lenape Indians of the area (if in fact they used a word tioga that was either a cognate to, or a borrowing of, the Iroquois word), or perhaps it began as the name of the country estate of a Euro-American gentleman farmer inspired by the Tioga placenames of Tioga County, Pennsylvania and Tioga County, New York.

Throughout the period of 1700 to 1850, the general Nicetown-Tioga area of Philadelphia county was rural, dotted with villages such as Nicetown. It contained farms that were a mixture of humble family farms as well as country estates for gentleman farmers. Travelers on the Germantown road between Philadelphia (which was then only the area known today as Center City) and Germantown passed through the area. There were woods and swampy places.

1850 to 1950

Like most of North Philadelphia, the Nicetown area experienced periods of explosive industrial growth during this era. The growth spurts waxed and waned with wars and recessions respectively, as did its ethnic diversity: Irish-Catholics from the famine in Ireland, the Polish-Jewish refugees from eastern Europe after World War II, the influx in the 1960s of African Americans escaping poverty and legal discrimination of the south, and surge of Puerto Rican relocation. All of these influxes were people of the blue collar and working class, which the neighborhood has always been, no matter which culture was largest at any particular time.

Companies with plants in or directly adjacent to Nicetown-Tioga included:

1950 to present

The industrial culture of the area peaked during World War II, but immediately after the war, area industry slowly began to melt away. White flight began in the 1950s and hastened in the 1960s through 1980s. Today there are a number of abandoned structures and a high crime rate in the neighborhood (hence today's North Philadelphia gallows-humor witticism that "there's nothing nice about Nicetown").

The huge turnover population of the 1960s overwhelmed the ability of the city to provide essential services to its constituents �$B�(Bschooling facility and supply shortages, housing shortages, the outsourcing of the fledgling computer to the suburbs and death of the industrial complex in Nicetown led to joblessness and poverty. All of these components led to the degrading of both public and personal life in Nicetown. Once popular traditional events, like the annual Easter parade on Germantown Avenue, summer concerts at the Hunting Park bandstand, the opening of its wooden carousel, patriotic day parades from the American Legion, May Day celebration at Steele School; the lively door to door street trade vanished with the changeover from coal furnaces to gas, electric iceboxes no longer needing the iceman, milk, butter and eggs in abundance at the store leading to the loss of the milkman. All of this led to the disappearance of a lively public life of the neighborhood. The continued change and impoverishment contributed to the flight of tradesman, and blue collar workers seeking work elsewhere. The death of Martin Luther King, Jr. set off riots that created fear throughout the neighborhood. Certain discrimination practices began to appear in the area as the racial and economic war took place and laid waste to what was known as Nicetown, as it did to many neighborhoods all across the nation as it faced the advent of the suburbs and the oncoming computer and space race. Philadelphia, like other U.S. Rust Belt cities, slowly started its changeover from an industrial city to a postindustrial city.

Nicetown-Tioga saw a brief spurt of urban gentrification in the early-mid 2000s. At the peak of the housing bubble in 2008, the 19140 ZIP code, which contains roughly Hunting Park and Nicetown-Tioga, had a median home sale price of $42,000. When the bubble burst, those prices declined significantly. In 2010, the average house there sold for $21,250, a 49% decrease in value.

Nicetown is predominately African American, with a significant Puerto Rican population.[7]

Nicetown-Tioga in the news

Education

Public libraries

Free Library of Philadelphia operates the Nicetown-Tioga Branch at 3720 North Broad Street.[8]

See also

Notes

Bibliography