Philadelphia County Pennsylvania (Page 10) has 50 places on the National Register of Historic Places including 9 places of National significance and 3 places of Statewide significance. Significant places include Randolph House, Reading Terminal and Trainshed, Reynolds-Morris House, RittenhouseTown Historic District and Roberts-Quay House.
Many famous people are associated with these Philadelphia County historic places including Paul Robeson, David Rittenhouse, Matthew Quay, Frank C. Scherer and Joseph Ryerss.
Some of the country's most noteable architects helped create the Philadelphia County places including John & William Reynolds, William Strickland, William Franci Gibbs, E.A. Wilson, Wilson Bros., Pietro Belluschi, Paul Cret, Thomas Holme, Robert Mills and Irwin T. Catharine. Prominent architectural styles found in Philadelphia Country are Colonial Revival, Georgian and Late Gothic Revival.
Historic Significance:
Person
Historic Person:
Robeson, Paul
Area of Significance:
Black
Period of Significance:
1950-1974
Historic Function:
Domestic
Historic Sub-function:
Single Dwelling
Current Function:
Recreation And Culture
Current Sub-function:
Museum
Paul Robeson spent his final decade in a modest, red-brick rowhouse at 4951 Walnut Street in West Philadelphia. This property is NRHP listing 00001345. Robeson moved here in 1966, seeking shelter with his sister, Marian Forsythe, after years of intense political persecution. The US government had spent decades tracking his every move. They even revoked his passport during the McCarthy era because he refused to apologize for his socialist views or stay silent about Jim Crow. By the time he reached Philadelphia, his health was failing. He needed a sanctuary. This house became exactly that, offering a quiet, domestic retreat where the blacklisted giant could finally rest.
Today, the site acts as a reminder of Robeson's stubborn resilience, not just his fame. It operates as a community-run museum. Visitors can stand in the very parlor where he sat by the bay window, surrounded by his old records and photographs. Local activists saved the property from ruin in the late 1990s. They knew the city held the final chapter of a man who was once the most famous Black performer on earth. So, they preserved this brownstone-trimmed house. It represents the domestic reality of a political exile inside his own country. That is its true power.