Valley News Dispatch

Lower Burrell considers recreation area for 90 acres it owns along Dutchman Run

Mary Ann Thomas
By Mary Ann Thomas
2 Min Read May 1, 2022 | 4 years Ago
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Lower Burrell is exploring outdoor recreational facilities for a proposed park on undeveloped property along Dutchman Run.

The city bought the 90 acres for $24,500 in 1967 from an area couple. The property has sat undeveloped for decades.

“When we first walked it, it was clear that the potential there is limitless,” said Lower Burrell Councilman Chris Fabry. Possibilities include trails, archery, camping, an obstacle course or a public safety training area, he said.

The timing is right, as the city is working with a firm on a comprehensive plan for its five other parks.

“While this isn’t an immediate project, we’re beginning to lay the groundwork for what will be something special,” Fabry said.

The city considered developing a park there before. In the early 2000s, when the city bought the land for what is now Kotecki Park, they looked at the Dutchman Run property.

Former Lower Burrell Mayor Don Kinosz said access and utilities were issues. The terrain in generally hilly but also includes a large flat area.

Kinosz said the biggest hurdle was there wasn’t much money available during his tenure to develop the park.

Fabry said facilities might not be as essential for this park.

The city’s other parks already have facilities dedicated to athletics, walking, fishing and playgrounds.

“The 90 acres would have its own identity focusing on outdoor activities such as hiking, archery, camping, etc.,” he said.

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How Dutchman Run got its name There’s an interesting history in the general area of the proposed park, which is…

How Dutchman Run got its name
There’s an interesting history in the general area of the proposed park, which is near a centuries-old, Native American trail along Pucketa Creek, according to a local historian.
The area was inhabited by Native Americans and settled by Revolutionary War land grants, said Ray Rieser of Lower Burrell, a local historian. The white settlers clashed with local tribes.
Dutchmans Run refers to the place where a German friend of Capt. Samuel Brady, who was known for doing battle with the Native Americans, captured an old Native in the late 1700s, Rieser said.
The German man took pity on the old man that he and Brady captured. The German loosened the bonds of the Native, who broke free and grabbed the German’s gun and tried to shoot him. But he missed, Rieser said.
The German grabbed the Native’s tomahawk and killed him.
The story became famous and the area became known as “Dutchman Run” for the German man, corrupting the word for the German language, Deutsche, to Dutch, Rieser said.

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