SEPTA to Install Historical Panels At Allen Lane Station

SEPTA to Install Historical Panels At Allen Lane Station

Officials to gather in West Philadelphia for design reveal

On Saturday, June 18, SEPTA General Manager and CEO Leslie S. Richards will join Pennsylvania State Representative Christopher M. Rabb and leaders of First Episcopal District AME Church to showcase the design of forthcoming historical panels honoring the memory and accomplishments of minister Richard Allen. The event will be held at 10 am at 3801 W. Market Street in the First District Plaza building.

SEPTA worked with leaders of First Episcopal District AME Church to design the 2’x 3’ soon-to-be-installed decorative panels which will tell the story of Allen’s contributions to racial justice in Philadelphia as a preacher during the late 18th century. When installed the panels will be located in the garden area of the outbound side of SEPTA’s Chestnut Hill West Regional Rail Station.
“Our stations can be so much more than a place to wait for a train or a bus. They are a wonderful way to share our history through public art, tell stories and allow people to learn and be inspired with each trip,” Richards said. “We are honored to have played a significant role in this very important and enduring endeavor.”

Allens Lane was originally named after William Allen, the 26th mayor of Philadelphia. But Allen was an enslaver and a British loyalist who was condemned in his own lifetime by abolitionists for his stance in favor of the continued enslavement of Black people.

Earlier this year Philadelphia City Council passed a resolution introduced by Council Member Cindy Bass to rename the street to honor the multi-talented leader, Richard Allen.
“We must closely examine popular narratives we’ve been so conditioned to embrace, especially versions of the past that marginalize the value of Black people and other communities of struggle,” said Pennsylvania State Representative Christopher Rabb. “Changing who Allens Lane is named after is a step in the right direction towards achieving racial equity and inclusion.”

Allen went on to co-found the Free African Society and the African Methodist Episcopal Church where he became a bishop. The AME church is the first independent Black denomination in the United States. He opened his first AME church in 1794 in Philadelphia, which is the Mother Church of the first national Black church denomination in the United States. It rests upon the oldest parcel of land in the country continuously owned by African Americans.