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Berks County, Pennsylvania

Berks County (Pennsylvania German: Barricks Kaundi) is a county in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. As of the 2020 census, the county's population was 428,849.[2] The county seat is Reading, the fourth-most populous city in the state.[3]

"Berks County" redirects here. For the county of England, see Berkshire.

Berks County

 United States

March 11, 1752

Reading

866 sq mi (2,240 km2)

857 sq mi (2,220 km2)

9.2 sq mi (24 km2)  1.1%

428,849

495/sq mi (191/km2)

4th, 6th, 9th

May 12, 1982[1]

The county borders Lehigh County to its north and its east, Schuylkill County to its north, Lebanon and Lancaster counties to its west, and Chester County to its south. The county is approximately 26 miles (42 km) southwest of Allentown, the state's third-largest city, and 64 miles (103 km) northwest of Philadelphia, the state's largest city.


The Schuylkill River, a 135-mile-long (217 km) tributary of the Delaware River, flows through Berks County. The county is part of the Reading, PA metropolitan statistical area (MSA), which in turn is part of the Greater Philadelphia metropolitan area known as the Philadelphia-Reading-Camden, PA-NJ-DE-MD combined statistical area (CSA).

History[edit]

Reading developed during the 1740s when inhabitants of northern Lancaster County sent several petitions requesting that a separate county be established. With the help of German immigrant Conrad Weiser, the county was formed on March 11, 1752, from parts of Chester County, Lancaster County, and Philadelphia County.[4]


It was named after the English county in which William Penn's family home lay, Berkshire, which is often abbreviated to Berks. Berks County began much larger than it is today. The northwestern parts of the county went to the founding of Northumberland County in 1772 and Schuylkill County in 1811, when it reached its current size.


In 2005, Berks County was added to the Delaware Valley Planning Area due to a fast-growing population and close proximity to the other communities.

(north)

Schuylkill County

(northeast)

Lehigh County

(east)

Montgomery County

(southeast)

Chester County

(southwest)

Lancaster County

(west)

Lebanon County

: 107,690 (42.53%)

Republican

: 104,430 (41.24%)

Democratic

: 30,154 (11.91%)

Independent

: 10,912 (4.31%)

Minor parties

As of September 21, 2023 there were 253,186 registered voters in Berks County.[18]


As of 2023, the Republican Party maintained a total registration edge over Democrats in Berks County. At the top of the Pennsylvania ticket in November 2022, Berks County split its votes, supporting Democrat Josh Shapiro for governor and Republican Mehmet Oz for U.S. Senate.


The first time since 1964 that a Democrat carried Berks in a Presidential election occurred in 2008, with Barack Obama receiving 53.9% of the vote to John McCain's 44.7%. The other three statewide winners (Rob McCord for treasurer, Jack Wagner for auditor general, and Tom Corbett for attorney general) also carried it.[20] While Republicans have controlled the commissioner majority most of the time and continue to control most county row offices, Democrats have become more competitive in Berks in recent years. In the 2012 Presidential election, Mitt Romney carried the county by approximately a one-percent margin, 49.6% to 48.6%, however, in 2016, Donald Trump carried Berks by a much larger margin of 52.9% to 42.7%.[21]

Albright College

Alvernia University

Kutztown University of Pennsylvania

Penn State Berks

Reading Area Community College

a former Recreational Demonstration Area, straddles the Berks and Chester County line.

French Creek State Park

is south of Reading on land once owned by Jacob Nolde, a Reading businessman and Pennsylvania environmentalist.

Nolde Forest Environmental Education Center

Ruth Zimmerman Natural Area, part of the William Penn Forest District in Oley.

[23]

Reading Public Museum in Reading is an art, science, and history museum.


The Reading Buccaneers Drum and Bugle Corps are an all-age drum corps based in Berks County. Founded in 1957, the corps is a charter member Drum Corps Associates and an 11-time DCA World Champion.


Reading is home to Berks Opera Company, founded in 2007 as Berks Opera Workshop.


There are two Pennsylvania state parks and one natural area in Berks County.


There are two Pennsylvania Historic Sites in Berks County.


The Old Morlatton Village in Douglassville is maintained by the Historic Preservation Trust of Berks County. The village is composed of four historic structures: White Horse Inn, George Douglass Mansion, Bridge keeper's House, and the Mouns Jones House, constructed in 1716, which is the oldest recorded building in the county.[24]


West Reading in home to the annual Art on the Avenue, which reached its 25th year in 2019.[25]

Berks Community Television (BCTV)

[26]

, the daily newspaper, based in Reading and founded in 1867

Reading Eagle

(830 AM), a radio station broadcasting news and conservative talk shows

WEEU

an Allentown-based news channel that covers the region

WFMZ-TV

(102.5 FM "Y102"), a commercial radio station licensed to serve Reading

WRFY-FM

Berks County is home to several media outlets, including:

(county seat)

Reading

former U.S. Congressman[27]

William Addams

folk musician, singer, and songwriter

Priscilla Ahn

U.S. Senator

John Barrasso

playwright

Douglas Carter Beane

former professional baseball player, Los Angeles Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies

Chad Billingsley

American pioneer, explorer, and frontiersman

Daniel Boone

professional race car driver

Kenny Brightbill

musician and former Blue's Clues host

Steve Burns

Civil War sailor, officer, founder of Carpenter Technology Corporation

James Henry Carpenter

illustrator, author and artist, lived in Boyertown from 1948 to 2006

Jack Coggins

former Major League Baseball player

Rocky Colavito

professional football player (Panthers, Saints, Giants, Raiders, Titans, and Colts)

Kerry Collins

actor, star of Room 222 and My Big Fat Greek Wedding

Michael Constantine

Harvard psychologist and TED Talks speaker

Amy Cuddy

actress

Lisa Eichhorn

NBA Basketball Player

Wayne Ellington

former professional baseball player, Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers

Carl Furillo

former professional football player, Chicago Bears, New Orleans Saints, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers

John Henry Gilmore, Jr.

reality television personality, Jon & Kate Plus 8

Jon Gosselin

reality television personality, Jon & Kate Plus 8

Kate Gosselin

former artist

Keith Haring

football professional football player, Miami Dolphins

Chad Henne

professional wrestler

Chris Hero

governor of Pennsylvania 1820–1823

Joseph Hiester

(1912–1999), auto racing pioneer

Tommy Hinnershitz

co-founder of YouTube

Chad Hurley

(1901–1982), novelist

Mildred Jordan

(born 1964), book jacket designer at Knopf Publishing Group[28]

Chip Kidd

(1744–1786), grandfather of 16th U.S. president Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln

(born 1975), professional football player

Matt Lytle

former NBA player

Donyell Marshall

(1864-1944), Labor leader and two-time Vice Presidential nominee

James H. Maurer

actress, [Top Gun/Witness/The Accused]

Kelly McGillis

former U.S. figure skating champion and Hall of Fame member

Gordon McKellen, Jr.

(1846–1933), Reading attorney and author of multiple history books about Berks County[29][30]

Morton L. Montgomery

NFL Hall of Fame

Lenny Moore

Democratic politician, served in the United States Senate[31]

Thomas Morris

(b. June 4, 1989), model and actress

Jillian Murray

architect, founder of Muhlenberg Greene Architects, American military and political leader 1887–1980

Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg

conservationist

Jacob Nolde

Senior Surgeon of the Continental Army during the American Revolution (1711–1787)

Bodo Otto

U.S. Medal of Honor winner (Civil War)[32]

William Sands

novelist

Martin Cruz Smith

World War II general

Carl Spaatz

major American Modernist poet (1879–1955)

Wallace Stevens

(born 1989), Grammy Award-winning country/pop singer-songwriter

Taylor Swift

professional football player

Ross Tucker

writer, 1932–2009

John Updike

NBA player

Lonnie Walker

(born 1994), Detroit Lions lineman

Alex Anzalone

former U.S. Representative

Gus Yatron

National Register of Historic Places listings in Berks County, Pennsylvania

F.W. Balthaser, Reading, PA: Reading Eagle Press, 1925.

The Story of Berks County, Pennsylvania.

D.B. Brunner, The Indians of Berks County, Pa., Being a Summary of all the Tangible Records of the Aborigines of Berks County, with Cuts and Descriptions of the Varieties of Relics Found within the County. Reading, PA: Eagle Book Print, 1897.

Morton L. Montgomery, Philadelphia: Everts, Peck & Richards, 1886.

History of Berks County in Pennsylvania.

Morton L. Montgomery, Reading, PA: C.F. Haage, printer, 1894.

History of Berks County, Pennsylvania, in the Revolution, from 1774 to 1783.

Morton L. Montgomery, Reading, PA: B.F. Owen, 1883.

Political Hand-Book of Berks County, Pennsylvania, 1752–1883.

Morton L. Montgomery, Philadelphia: J.B. Rodgers Printing Co., 1889.

School history of Berks County in Pennsylvania.

Kathy M. Scogna, . Historical Review of Berks County, Winter 2001–02.

"The Birth of a County — 1752,"

Official website