Lenape Place Names
Lenape place names are indigenous geographic terms from the Lenape language that survive in the modern landscape of Philadelphia and the surrounding region. The Lenape people were displaced from their ancestral homeland in the 18th century, but dozens of place names derived from Unami, the Lenape dialect spoken in the Philadelphia area, remain in daily use. Found on maps, street signs, and in everyday conversation, these names represent one of the most tangible connections between contemporary Philadelphia and the indigenous peoples who inhabited the region for thousands of years before European colonization.[1]
Major Place Names
Manayunk
Manayunk, the neighborhood along the Schuylkill River in Northwest Philadelphia, takes its name from the Lenape word ménëyunk, meaning "where we go to drink" or "place of drinking." The Schuylkill River itself was a vital water source for Lenape communities. It served as a gathering place and resource. When developers transformed the area into an industrial mill town in the 19th century, they kept the indigenous name, and it continues to identify one of Philadelphia's most distinctive neighborhoods. Today you'll find steep hills, a Main Street shopping district, and easy access to the Schuylkill River Trail.[2]
Wissahickon
The Wissahickon, both the creek and the valley it flows through, derives from the Lenape word wísahickon, generally translated as "catfish creek" or "creek of catfish." Once populated by abundant catfish, the stream served as an important food source for indigenous communities. The Wissahickon Creek runs through a dramatic gorge in Northwest Philadelphia before joining the Schuylkill River near Manayunk. In the late 19th century, the surrounding valley was preserved as a park and remains one of the most significant natural areas within Philadelphia's boundaries. Hikers, bikers, and nature lovers visit throughout the year.[1]
Passyunk
Passyunk, attached to Passyunk Square and the famous Passyunk Avenue in South Philadelphia, likely derives from a Lenape word meaning "in the valley" or "the place in the lowland." The area sits lower than surrounding terrain. Passyunk Avenue, one of Philadelphia's oldest roads, follows an ancient Lenape trail that connected the Delaware River to the interior. Its diagonal route across South Philadelphia's grid makes it distinctive. The street's home to the famous cheesesteak rivals Pat's King of Steaks and Geno's Steaks, as well as a vibrant dining corridor along East Passyunk Avenue.[3]
Schuylkill
The Schuylkill River presents a more complex etymological case. The name as spelled is Dutch, meaning "hidden river" or "hidden creek," applied by Dutch explorers who initially missed the river's mouth when sailing up the Delaware. Some scholars believe the Dutch name may have incorporated or translated an existing Lenape term. The Lenape called the river Ganshowahanna or similar variants, meaning "falling water" or "roaring waters," likely referring to the falls that once existed near present-day Fairmount. Whatever its current name preserves, the river itself was central to Lenape life in the region, providing fish, transportation routes, and access to rich hunting grounds in the interior.[4]
Other Surviving Names
Numerous other Lenape place names survive throughout the Philadelphia region. Tacony, a neighborhood in Northeast Philadelphia, derives from a word meaning "forest" or "wilderness." Shackamaxon, the site of William Penn's legendary treaty with the Lenape, now Penn Treaty Park in Fishtown, comes from a Lenape term meaning "place of eels" or "eel fishing place." Pennypack, the creek and park in Northeast Philadelphia, derives from penapaëk, meaning "deep, dead water" or "still water pond," describing the stream's character.[2]
The names Moyamensing, a historic district in South Philadelphia, Cohocksink, a vanished creek in Northern Liberties, and Wingohocking, a creek in North Philadelphia now largely buried underground, all preserve Lenape words, though scholars sometimes dispute their precise meanings. Even Conshohocken, just outside the city limits in Montgomery County, takes its name from a Lenape term meaning "pleasant valley" or "elegant ground." These names span the entire geography of the region, showing how thoroughly the Lenape knew and named the landscape they inhabited.[1]
Significance and Interpretation
Lenape place names in Philadelphia represent both a preservation of indigenous heritage and a complex legacy of colonization. On one hand, these names maintain a living connection to the region's pre-colonial past, keeping Lenape words part of everyday Philadelphia speech. On the other hand, European colonists often retained indigenous place names while displacing the people who created them from their lands. They found these names useful for navigation and communication but rarely acknowledged the sophisticated geographic knowledge behind them.[5]
Modern scholarship has worked to recover the original meanings and pronunciations of these place names, which were often distorted as they passed through Dutch, Swedish, and English transliteration. The Lenape Center and academic linguists have collaborated to reconstruct proper pronunciations and to educate the public about the cultural context of these terms. Understanding that "Wissahickon" means "catfish creek" transforms a simple geographic label into something more. It becomes a window onto the ecological knowledge of the Lenape, who understood the landscape in terms of its natural resources and inhabitants.[6]
Educational Initiatives
In recent years, efforts to educate Philadelphians about the Lenape origins of familiar place names have increased significantly. Historical markers, museum exhibits, and educational programs now regularly explain the indigenous etymology of local names. The Philadelphia History Museum and Historical Society of Pennsylvania have featured exhibitions on Lenape history that include discussions of place names. Some schools have incorporated lessons on Lenape place names into local history curricula, helping students understand that Philadelphia's map preserves traces of a much older way of understanding the landscape.[7]
These educational efforts are part of a broader movement toward recognizing and honoring indigenous heritage in Philadelphia. Land acknowledgments that name the Lenape as the original inhabitants have become common at public events and institutions. While such gestures can't undo the historical injustices suffered by the Lenape, they help ensure that the indigenous history of the Philadelphia region isn't forgotten. The place names themselves serve as permanent reminders, embedded in the landscape, of the people who lived here first.[5]
See Also
- Lenape People
- Lenape Language
- Lenape Trails
- Manayunk
- Wissahickon Valley Park
- Passyunk Square
- Penn Treaty Park
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 [ A History of the Indian Villages and Place Names in Pennsylvania] by George P. Donehoo (1928), Telegraph Press, Harrisburg, PA
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 [ Native American Placenames of the United States] by William Bright (2004), University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, OK
- ↑ [ Philadelphia: A 300-Year History] by Russell F. Weigley (1982), W.W. Norton, New York
- ↑ [ The Lenape-Delaware Indian Heritage: 10,000 BC to AD 2000] by Herbert C. Kraft (2001), Lenape Books, Elizabeth, NJ
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 "Lenape (Lenni Lenape)". Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved December 29, 2025
- ↑ "Lenape Territories". The Lenape Center. Retrieved December 29, 2025
- ↑ "Historical Society of Pennsylvania". Retrieved December 29, 2025