Augusta Township, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania


Augusta Township was one of the seven original townships of Northumberland County, Pennsylvania in the United States. It was formed in 1772 and ceased to exist on April 13, 1846 when it was divided into Upper Augusta and Lower Augusta townships.

History

According to Northumberland County historian Charles Fisher Snyder:
"Among the original townships of Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, one of the first to be named and whose boundaries were defined, was Augusta. As then laid out it embraced all the territory east of the Susquehanna and south of the North Branch eastward to the old Berks-Northampton line, which crossed the North Branch near the present site of Bloomsburg.

Upper Augusta and Lower Augusta were formed by the division of Augusta township in 1846...However, at the time of the division the name of "Porter" had been suggested for the southern portion."

According to members of the Lower Augusta Planning Committee who drafted a revised history of their township in 2007, township and county officials involved in the planning and implementation of Augusta Township's division had originally planned to: a.) retain the name of "Augusta Township" for the newly created northern township, and b.) name the newly created southern portion of the township after former Pennsylvania governor David Rittenhouse Porter. It was only "t the last moment, that planners decided that the names should be Upper Augusta Township and Lower Augusta Township. " division was defined as a line crossing Little Shamokin Creek near its junction with Plum Creek."

Notable buildings

Several notable buildings were erected in Augusta Township during its 74-year history: