Swabia Creek Explained

Swabia Creek
Name Other:Swope Creek, Swabian Creek, Swamp Run
Name Etymology:"Swabia" derives from the birthplace of many of the area's early settlers. "Swope" is an anglicization of "Schwab" (a person from Swabia).
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:United States
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Pennsylvania
Subdivision Type3:County
Subdivision Name3:Lehigh, Berks
Discharge1 Location:Macungie, Pennsylvania
Source1:Primary (west) branch
Source1 Location:Rittenhouse Gap
Source1 Coordinates:40.474°N -75.6269°W
Source2:East branch
Source2 Location:Hensingersville Dam
Source2 Coordinates:40.4878°N -75.5821°W
Source2 Elevation:843feet
Source3:Headwater of Mountain Creek
Source3 Location:Upper Milford Township, Pennsylvania
Source3 Coordinates:40.4942°N -75.5628°W
Source Confluence:West and east branches
Source Confluence Location:Hensingersville, Pennsylvania
Source Confluence Coordinates:40.5038°N -75.5953°W
Source Confluence Elevation:433feet
Mouth:Little Lehigh Creek
Mouth Location:Macungie, Pennsylvania
Mouth Coordinates:40.5358°N -75.5387°W
Mouth Elevation:351feet
River System:Little Lehigh Creek
Basin Size:12.37sqmi
Tributaries Right:Mountain Creek, Indian Creek

Swabia Creek is a tributary of Little Lehigh Creek in Berks and Lehigh Counties in the eastern Pennsylvania region of the Lehigh Valley.

Sources

The primary (west) branch of Swabia Creek begins in the Bear Creek Mountain Resort, near Rittenhouse Gap in Longswamp Township, Berks County. Two other tributary streams, unnamed, also begin in Berks County. The east branch begins with numerous seeps and rivulets feeding into Hensingersville Dam in Lower Macungie Township. Two tributaries, Mountain Creek and an unnamed stream, begin in Upper Milford Township. All streams begin on the South Mountain ridge, although surface and ground waters enter from Lock Ridge.

Course

Swabian valleys

A tributary of the west branch flows past the village of Red Lion and joins the primary branch and another tributary in the village of Maple Grove. The west branch of Swabia Creek then runs along the Lock Ridge south face.[1] The east branch passes through Hensingersville Dam.[2] The east and west branches connect in Hensingersville. Swabia creek then runs north to Alburtis through Lock Ridge Park. The creek turns east, running roughly parallel to railroad tracks.[3] [4]

Upper alluvial plain

Three intermittent runs feed Swabia Creek in the upper alluvial plain between Alburtis and Macungie. Each starts on South Mountain, flows north, and, after crossing Mountain Road, roughly parallels an historic road. The western two pass through The Hills at Lock Ridge, also known as The Reserves at Annandale development. The Schoeneck Road run provides the back boundary line for houses located on Seip Road and Knerr Drive. The Orchard Road run was relocated and channelized immediately west of Orchard Road. The Gehman Road run passes the Allen Organ headquarters and Mack Trucks assembly plant. After Gehman Road, Swabia Creek enters Macungie. In Macungie, Swabia Creek is joined by Mountain Creek.

Mountain Creek

Mountain Creek starts in Upper Milford Township, behind a South Mountain promontory known locally as Macungie Mountain. The creek flows past Reimert Memorial Bird Haven and then various springs in the Macungie watershed before entering Macungie at Kalmbach Park. Mountain Creek flows along the west side of Memorial Park before joining Swabia Creek.

Lower alluvial plain

After receiving Mountain Creek, Swabia Creek turns northeast. Indian Creek, a final intermittent brook, joins Swabia Creek just downstream of Brookside Country Club after meandering past a large group of petroleum tank farms and is fed, in part, from Brinker Pond.[5] After receiving Indian Creek, Swabia Creek joins Little Lehigh Creek. The majority of Swabia Creek's route is in Lower Macungie Township in Lehigh County and other sources beginning in Berks County and Upper Milford Township in Lehigh County.

Watershed

Swabia Creek has a drainage area of 12.37 square miles.[6] Swabia Creek is in the Pennsylvania State Water Plan watershed #2C-Lehigh River.

The Swabia Creek watershed includes Mountain Creek. Mountain Creek joins Swabia Creek in Macungie. Mountain Creek and adjacent springs have historically provided water to Macungie.[7]

Natural environment

Surface geology

South Mountain and Lock Ridge expose the region's pre-Cambrian, metamorphic basement rock, primarily granitic Byram gneiss with some hornblendic gneiss. Immediately above the village of Maple Grove and similarly along the north face of South Mountain, the descending Swabia Creek branches and tributaries encounter a band of quartzite, variously referred to as Hardyston quartzite and Potsdam sandstone. Skolithos fossils can be found embedded in this quartzite along Lock Ridge. After Maple Grove, the west branch flows along a depression created by a fault where the ancient crystalline gneiss of Lock Ridge erupts through the Leithsville formation.[8] The Leithsville formation is composed of dolomite with shale and chert and is sometimes referred to as Tomstown dolomite. The same progression in surface geology (gneiss, quartzite, dolomite) occurs for the east branch and Mountain Creek. Swabia Creek mostly passes through Leithsville formation from Lock Ridge through Alburtis to Macungie. In the lower alluvial plain after Macungie, the Leithsville formation submerges under the Allentown formation, which contains limestone mixed with dolomite.[9] The Leithsville, Allentown, and nearby Epler formations are all part of the Kittatinny supergroup.[10] [11]

Many limonite mines were located in the upper and lower Swabian valleys and the upper alluvial plain. Many of these mines were operated by the Thomas Iron Company. Several magnetite and hematite mines were situated near the upper portion of the east branch. The iron ore was located near the surface in shale present in interfaces between the various formations. Limestone quarries are found in the lower alluvial plain. Gneiss quarries are found on Lock Ridge and near Hensingersville. A site where Indians quarried jasper is found near the upper portion of Mountain Creek.[12] [13] [14] Soils in the alluvial plain from Alburtis to Little Lehigh Creek are silt loams, such as Lindside and Melvin series.

Flora

Many freshwater forested wetlands, emergent wetlands, and ponds found along Swabia Creek are listed in the National Wetlands Inventory. The wetlands are listed as temporarily flooded palustrine systems containing broad-leaved deciduous forest, shrubland, or reeds. The Macungie watershed, through which Mountain Creek flows, contains Northern Appalachian circumneutral seeps natural community which can support diverse threatened or endangered plants. South Mountain is generally dominated by tulip tree, sweet birch, red oak, and silky dogwood.[15] Common undergrowth includes jewelweed, bulrush, poison ivy, Virginia creeper, and fox grape. Native plants growing in the alluvial plain include vervain, jewelweed, boneset, lobelia (including cardinal flower), sedges, aster, Joe-Pye weed, dwarf bluestar, black eyed susan, golden ragwort, goldenrod, red swamp mallow, redtwig dogwood and river birch, and dogwood. Common introduced plants in the alluvial plain include oxeye daisy. Invasive plants in the alluvial plain, removed during restoration, include Japanese knotweed, Japanese hops, purple loosestrife, and reed canary grass.

Fauna

Swabia Creek contains brown trout, rainbow trout, catfish and sunfish. Swabia Creek and Mountain Creek are classified as High Quality Cold Water Fisheries.[16] [17]

Permanent avian residents of Reimert Memorial Bird Haven, near the Mountain Creek headwater, include red-bellied, downy, and hairy woodpeckers, and white-breasted nuthatches, black-capped chickadees, tufted titmice (commonly called "warblers"), northern cardinals, blue jays, and non-native house finches. Common migrant birds include dark-eyed juncos, American robins, song sparrows, mourning doves, American goldfinches, purple finches, northern flickers, and hermit thrushes.[18]

Conservation

In August 2005, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection performed a geomorphic assessment and found that agricultural sedimentation and urban runoff were impairing water quality, degrading aquatic habitat, destabilizing the channel and banks, and causing other negative impacts. The department placed Swabia Creek on its Integrated List of impaired waterways. The assessment recommended implementing specific best management practices, including establishing native vegetation and use of natural stream channel design, to improve habitat quality and floodplain function. The department granted funds to The Wildlands Conservancy to improve stream and wetlands conditions.[19] [20]

The upper Swabian valleys are located in the Pennsylvania Highlands as defined by the federal Highlands Conservation Act of 2004. This designation may result in development of a conservation greenway that includes large portions of the Swabia Creek watershed. The Macungie Watershed, which is drained by Mountain Creek, is listed as an "Area of Statewide Significance" (and by The Nature Conservancy as a priority level 1) and the surrounding areas along South Mountain are listed as "Very High Conservation Priority".

The boroughs of Macungie and Alburtis and Lower Macungie Township have developed plans for a 3-mile greenway and trail extending from Alburtis to Macungie, parallel to Swabia Creek but south of the Norfolk Southern tracks. A proposed spur would extend from Macungie along Mountain Creek to the Pennsylvania Highlands Greenway atop South Mountain.

Human history

When Europeans arrived, the inhabitants were most likely Lenape. As the name of the creek suggests, many early European settlers in the vicinity were from Swabia (German: Schwaben). The abundance of iron ore attracted early surface miners, then larger furnace owners and finally the Catasauqua and Fogelsville Railroad was constructed primarily to transport ore from the Swabian valley to the furnaces. A well-regarded inn in Maple Grove operates in a building existing since around 1783.

A similarly named, but otherwise unrelated, Schwaben Creek runs through and gives its name to part of Washington and Upper Mahanoy townships, Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, about 75 miles west of Swabia Creek. This Schwaben Creek (or possibly a similarly named creek in Pine Grove Township, Schuylkill County) appears to be that forming the north boundary of the Mahantongo region.

Etymology

Swabia Creek is also commonly referred to as Swope Creek. The U.S. Geological Survey's Board on Geographic Names decided that the official reference is "Swabia Creek", while recognizing "Swabian Creek", "Swamp Run" and "Swope Creek" as variant names.[21] The names "Swabia Creek" and "Swope Creek" both derive from the fact that many early settlers in the area are from the Swabia region of Germany.[22] "Swope" and "Swabian" are synonyms. In Bavaria, Swope (or "Swab") means a person who lives or lived in Swabia. Swope derives from the Germanic spelling, Schwaben, and ultimately the Latin name for the German tribe, Suebi.[23] [24]

See also

External links

Maps

Photographs

Notes and References

  1. The SR 3001 crossing is just upstream of the confluence of east and west branches.
  2. Web site: Fish Passage Decision Support System . U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serve . 28 August 2011. Indicates that Hensingersville Dam (barrier id #38_23490) is listed in the National Inventory of Dams as for recreation purposes, on the east branch of Swope Creek, and in the Lehigh watershed.
  3. Book: D'Invilliers . Edward Vincent . The Geology of The South Mountain Belt of Berks County . https://books.google.com/books?id=2uMbAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA25 . Second Geological Survey of Pennsylvania, Report of Progress . II . 1883 . Board of Commissioners of Geological Survey . Harrisburg, Pennsylvania . 25 . Rivers and Streams . About one and one half miles N. E. of Centreville, Lehigh County, the Little Lehigh receives the Swope Creek, which, rising in Rittenhouse Gap, Long Swamp township, flows northeast past Maple Grove, back of Lock Ridge, and enters the valley close to the furnace of that name, one half mile east of Alburtis.

    This stream receives many additions from the innumerable rivulets on north flank of South Mountains, south of Millerstown, Lehigh county, before flowing into the Little Lehigh Creek as above mentioned..
  4. Book: D'Invilliers . Edward Vincent . The Geology of The South Mountain Belt of Berks County . https://books.google.com/books?id=2uMbAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA42 . Second Geological Survey of Pennsylvania, Report of Progress . II . 1883 . Board of Commissioners of Geological Survey . Harrisburg, Pennsylvania . 42 . Mountain Anticlinals . The valley of the Swope Creek, a branch of the Little Lehigh, rising in Rittenhouse Gap, immediately south of the hill, is probably an overturned synclinal, showing everywhere south-east dips throughout the numerous iron mines in that district, and divided from the Siesholtzville Basin by the overturned anticlinal running south of Gardner and Red Lion Stations on the Catasauqua and Fogelsville RR, and parallel with the Long Swamp-Hereford line to the West Branch Perkiomen Creek. Here it is lost in the flats north-west of Huff's Church..
  5. News: Novak . Steve . 5 Sep 2017 . These are the most flood-prone roads in the Lehigh Valley, per PennDOT . Lehigh Valley Live .

    As of 2017, Brookside Road, which follows this stream, is one of the most flood prone roads in Lehigh County

  6. Book: Water resources inventory report: Act of July 25, 1913 . 3 . 1917 . Pennsylvania Water Supply Commission . Harrisburg, PA . 28 . 28 Aug 2011. "Swope Creek (or Swabian Creek)" has a drainage area of 12.4sqmi and drains into the Little Lehigh Creek and the Middle Delaware Sub-basin.
  7. Book: Fourth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Health, 1909 . 10 Sep 2011 . 1 . 1911 . Pennsylvania. Dept. of Health . Harrisburg, PA . 780–781 . Macungie, Lehigh County . https://books.google.com/books?id=4RhNAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA780 . The supply is obtained from seven springs and a small run (Mountain Creek), about one and a quarter miles south of Macungie in Lower Macungie and Upper Milford townships. * * * The drainage area on the slope above the springs and creek is about one square mile in extent. It is partly cultivated land and partly covered with second growth timber. There are ten farmsteads and probably forty persons residing on this area above and a considerable distance from the springs, the nearest of which is about one-half mile. A number of dwellings, however, are very close to the small creek, which at times only is used as a source of supply. * * * About sixteen hundred feet north of Number One Spring and three hundred feet north of Number [*781] Six Spring, a small masonry dam is built across the creek from which a four inch pipe provided with a valve extends westward to a small masonry intake built over the four inch collecting main. * * * The present source of supply from numerous springs appears to be beyond suspicion, but the introduction of a surface supply from Mountain Creek which receives barnyard and household drainage is naturally suspicious and its use should be discouraged. It appears that the creek supply is used only when absolutely necessary and never immediately after or during a rain storm..
  8. Book: Miller . Benjamin L. . Lehigh County Pennsylvania Geology & Geography . 13 Sep 2011 . Bulletin C 39 . 4 . 1941 . Pennsylvania Geological Survey . Harrisburg, PA . 153.
  9. Web site: Mineral Resources Data System . Mineral Resources Program . U.S. Geological Survey. The watershed lies in the following USGS quarter grids: Manatawny NE (primary headwater), East Greenville NW (majority of Swabia Creek valley, Hensingersville dam, Mountain Creek headwater), East Greenville NE (small portion of upper Mountain Creek), Allentown West SW (Lock Ridge Park, upper alluvial plain), Allentown West SE (lower alluvial plain, lower Mountain Creek).
  10. Pennsylvania Geological Survey . Geologic Map of Pennsylvania . https://archive.today/20120803132420/http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/topogeo/pub/map/map001.aspx . dead . August 3, 2012 . 2 . 1980 . Berg . T. M. . Edmunds . W. E. . Geyer . A. R. . J. G. Kuchinski . Miles . C. E. . 1:250,000 . 4 . Map 1, eastern half . 19 Sep 2011.
  11. Pennsylvania Geological Survey . Rock types of Pennsylvania . https://archive.today/20120724111842/http://www.dcnr.state.pa.us/topogeo/pub/map/map063.aspx . dead . July 24, 2012 . 2 . 1984 . Berg . T. M. . Sevon . W. D. . Abel . Robin . James H. Dolimpio . 1:500,000 . 4 . Map 63 . 19 Sep 2011.
  12. Prehistoric Jasper Mines in the Lehigh Hills . Popular Science Monthly/Volume 43/September 1893 . Popular Science Monthly . Mercer . Henry C . Henry Chapman Mercer . 1893 . 662-673.
  13. Book: Miller . Benjamin L. . Lehigh County Pennsylvania Geology & Geography . 13 Sep 2011 . Bulletin C 39 . 4 . 1941 . Pennsylvania Geological Survey . Harrisburg, PA . 110 . See also geologic map.
  14. Web site: Lehigh County . 8 Feb 2013 . This Week in Pennsylvania Archaeology . The State Museum of Pennsylvania . Harrisburg, PA . 14 Dec 2014 .
  15. Gallo . Jenine . Pearl . Kathy . Heffner . Wendy . Halma . J. Robert . August 1996 . Analysis of the Woody Vegetation and Avifauna of the Reimert Memorial Bird Haven . Journal of the Pennsylvania Academy of Science . 70 . 1 . 9–14 . 1044-6753 . 21 Jan 2017 . The dominant tree species were mixed oaks (black, red and scarlet), sweet birch and tulip-tree. While the Tulip-tree is the most valuable species on the property, the mixed oaks provide a majority of the cover. The understory is composed predominantly of spicebush and red-panicled dogwood. A winter bird survey determined that mostly passerines and woodpeckers were either residing at or visiting the sanctuary. . The article also references white ash, chestnut oak, "blackberry" (actually black raspberry), round-lobed hepatica, and spleenwort and other flora.
  16. Web site: Wild Trout Waters (Naturally Reproducing) - June 2011 . June 2011 . Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission . 28 Aug 2011 . dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110928231631/http://www.fish.state.pa.us/trout_repro.pdf . 28 September 2011 . Swabia Creek, Lehigh County, Tributary To Little Lehigh Creek, Wild Trout Limits: Headwaters dnst to mouth, Lower Limit Lat: 40.535557, Lower Limit Lon: -75.53833
  17. Lists both Swabia and Mountain Creeks.
  18. Web site: Bird haven in Macungie gives a welcome respite . Blangger . Tim . 18 July 2008 . The Morning Call . tronc, Inc. . Allentown PA . 21 Jan 2017 .
  19. News: $60,000 granted to upgrade Lower Macungie stream . The Morning Call . Allentown, PA . 8 Jan 2007 . 10 Sep 2011 . The Wildlands Conservancy was awarded a $60,000 state grant to improve the water and stream conditions of Swabia Creek, which runs along Brookside Country Club in Lower Macungie Township.

    Swabia Creek contains brown trout and is a tributary of the Little Lehigh Creek, a main source of drinking water for Allentown.

    In 2004, the state categorized the aquatic life in Swabia Creek as "impaired." An assessment the following year concluded that water quality, aquatic habitat, stream channel stability, stream bank stability and flood plain function need to be improved. The project will not only protect and enhance the portion of Swabia Creek at Brookside Country Club, but also downstream areas of the creek and the Little Lehigh..
  20. Web site: Swabia Creek will get restoration from Wildlands Conservancy . 5 July 2011 . Lehigh Valley Wild . The Morning Call . Allentown, PA . 10 Sep 2011.
  21. Web site: Feature Detail Report for: Swabia Creek . 2 Aug 1979 . USGS . 29 August 2011. GNIS ID 1193503
  22. Book: Miller, Benjamin LeRoy . Geology of Lehigh and Northampton Counties, Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania Geological Survey . 4 . 1 . 1941 . Harrisburg, PA . 81 . Toponymy . http://digital.lib.lehigh.edu/lvgeology/pdf/pgsLC081.pdf . Swabian Creek, Lower Macungie Township; for Swabia in southern Germany where many of the early settlers were born. In Davis’ atlas is called Swope Creek. Seems to be the stream called Swamp Run on a map drawn in 1759. .
  23. Book: Shuffelton . F . A Mixed race: ethnicity in early America . 28 Aug 2011 . 1993 . Oxford University Press US . New York, NY . 978-0-19-507523-6 . One Swabian was, in his own words, a Schwob, which was often rendered into English as 'a Swope.'.
  24. Book: Swope . G. E. . History of the Swope family and their connections. 1678-1896 . 28 Aug 2011 . 1896 . Cochran Printers . Madison, WI . 19 . The Schwab (Swab) -- Americanized Swope -- name is one of the oldest in German history..