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City of Philadelphia company history timeline

1800

By 1800 it was the largest town in the USA. In 1800 the population of Philadelphia was 41,000.

1805

The Academy of Natural Science, the oldest institution of its kind in America, was founded in 1805.

1854

1854 Philadelphia is incorporated

1874

Meanwhile in Philadelphia Zoo opened in 1874.

1876

The Philadelphia Navy Yard ceased operations on September 27, 1996. It continued to support the Navy at its Southwark location through the Civil War, but continued growth forced it to move to League Island in 1876.

Also in 1876, the Philadelphia Museum of Art opened.

In 1876, Philadelphia hosted one of the country's first international expositions, to commemorate the centennial of the Declaration of Independence.

The Philadelphia Museum of Art, founded in 1876, displays some of the world's finest Impressionist art.

1900

Immigrants flooded into the city and by 1900 its population had risen to nearly 1.3 million.

1901

Philadelphia City Hall was built in 1901.

1929

1929 Rodin Museum is built in Philadelphia

1937

In September 1937, Congress passed the Wagner-Stegall Act, which created the United States Housing Authority (USHA). The USHA was established to provide loans to local housing agencies for slum clearance and housing for low-income families.

1938

1938 Philadelphia History Museum is founded

1949

The Philadelphia Housing Authority, with funds allocated by the Housing Act of 1949, built high-rise, modernist apartment buildings in West Philadelphia in a failed effort to provide adequate housing for the area’s low-income black population.

1950

Committed to modernist urban planning, government efficiency, and social and racial justice, the Young Turks framed a new city charter (adopted in 1950), revamped the city’s moribund planning commission, and created a Commission on Human Relations dedicated to racial justice.

1954

The 1954 Housing Act shifted the federal focus from slum clearance and housing development to housing rehabilitation, or conservation.

1961

Mantua Hall, a high-rise public housing edifice, opened in 1961 in the working-poor, black-segregated neighborhood of Mantua.

1963

Liberal reform of the city’s Home Rule Charter included significant antidiscrimination measures that opened thousands of municipal jobs based on civil service exams to blacks, who, by 1963, held 39 percent of the city’s municipal jobs and 36 percent of its public-school teaching positions.

1968

Sullivan Progress Plaza Shopping Center opened in 1968.

1973

Kirk R. Petshek, The Challenge of Urban Reform: Policies and Programs in Philadelphia (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1973), 168.

1981

The Court at King of Prussia opened in 1981.

1987

1987 One Liberty Place is built In Philadelphia

1993

The Philadelphia Convention Center opened in 1993.

2003

2003 National Constitution Center opens in Philadelphia

2008

Comcast Center was built in 2008.

2017

In 2017 the population of Philadelphia was 1.58 million.

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