GreeneScene Magazine
  • ArticlesNEW
  • Contests
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
    • Fair Food Favorites
    • Person Place or Thing
    • Where is This?
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company
No Result
View All Result
GreeneScene Magazine
  • ArticlesNEW
  • Contests
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
    • Fair Food Favorites
    • Person Place or Thing
    • Where is This?
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company
No Result
View All Result
GreeneScene Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Community

I Love This Place: Fordyce

Colleen Nelson by Colleen Nelson
April 20, 2021
in Community, Local History, Local People, Special Interest
2
Shining the Light: Fordyce United Methodist Church
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The village of Fordyce is easy to miss – it sits on a straight stretch of Garards Fort Road, surrounded by grassy bottomland and 7000 reforested acres of State Game Land 223. Step on the gas and you’ll miss it.

What catches the eye if you’re just cruising through is the brick one-room Fordyce School, now headquarters of the Warrior Trail Association.  Beside it is another blast from the past – a general store that sat vacant for years. It’s open now as The Dutch House at the corner of the crossroads leading to Jefferson to the east and Kirby to the west, if you’re up for a back roads ramble. But if you have the time to see America as it used to be, Fordyce is a good place to pull over, get out and meet the neighbors. They know what’s been going on around here for the last 200 some years.

 “See?” Kathy Morris Miller placed the old photograph on her dining room table and pointed to a smudge of gray beside a cleared field that is now game land. “That was the Moredock farm. The cemetery is there above it. You can hardly see it now but I could take you up if you have time.”

The Morris family Bicentennial Farm was honored in 2007 for being owned and operated by the same family for more than 200 years. Kathy shows me the fragile original deed dated 1786 she found tucked away in a family bible that got her started on her genealogical quest. The farm’s 240 remaining acres that once supported a dairy business are now leased for cattle and hay. The stately farmhouse built in 1875 has been restored and is filled with family artifacts, photographs, and lifetimes of family lore. We spend the afternoon leafing through what Kathy has researched, assembled and is happy to share.

When Kathy testified before the Public Utility Commission about proposed plans to put a high voltage electrical tower grid through Fordyce in 2007, she added historical preservation to the concerns of property devaluation and health issues, Seven generations of patriots lived here, she pointed out. Three times great grandfather Jonathan Morris and his brother George came in the 1770s and helped build Garard’s Fort to protect first settlers, then stayed to serve the Revolution as frontier rangers. The Morris farm had just been awarded Bicentennial Farm status by the Pennsylvania Secretary of Agriculture and the proposed lines “hissing with deadly voltage and maintained with deadly herbicides” would cut through the farm and pass within a few hundred yards of the house and barn. 

Her words and the impassioned testimony of others helped win the day for six family farms and the historic integrity of Fordyce.

The Caldwells Atlas of 1876 has an insert map of the village that grew up around “Moredock’s X Roads” and a good eye can spot the post office, general store, school and church. One dot represents a shoe shop, another, by the church, shows where George Elms once had a blacksmith shop. 

Kathy points on the Caldwell Atlas map at two log cabins, both long gone, on either side of the original Morris deed. Morris families lived in them until one brother sold his share and great grandfather Jonathan built the present farmhouse for his wife Charlotte and their ten children.

Farming isn’t the only business in Fordyce these days, Kathy tells me. Her next-door neighbors the Zalars have a bus company and just built a new home.

The future is coming at its own pace, one day and one season at a time. By summer, Warrior Trail members will hopefully be having potluck dinner meetings again and out-of-towners will be taking the Kirby exit on Interstate 79 to shop The Dutch House. And in a few years, who knows what sustainable crops will be growing or grazing on these old family farms? 

Slow down, stop by and see for yourself. 

Donation

Buy author a coffee

Donate
Colleen Nelson

Colleen Nelson

Colleen has been a freelance artist longer than she’s been a journalist but her inner child who read every word on cereal boxes and went on to devour school libraries and tap out stories on her old underwood portable was not completely happy until she became a VISTA outreach worker for Community Action Southwest in 1990. Her job – find out from those who live here what they need so that social services can help fill the gaps. “I went in to the Greene County Messenger and told Jim Moore I’d write for free about what was going on in the community and shazam! I was a journalist!” Soon she was filing stories about rural living with the Observer-Reporter, the Post-Gazette and the GreeneSaver (now GreeneScene). Colleen has been out and about in rural West Greene since 1972. It was neighbors who helped her patch fences and haul hay and it would be neighbors who told her the stories of their greats and great-greats and what it was like back in the day. She and neighbor Wendy Saul began the Greene Country Calendar in 1979, a labor of love that is ongoing. You guessed it – she loves this place!

Related Posts

A scenic view of Mon View Park in Greensboro features playgrounds, open grassy areas, large trees, and the Mon View Roller Rink and Community Center sign.
Leisure

Mon View Park: A Hidden Gem

by Dave Plavi
June 30, 2026
A rustic display inside a country gift shop features floral arrangements, ceramic frogs, decorative signs, and handcrafted home decor.
Business

Summer in the Country

by Becci Watson
June 30, 2026
A train themed parade vehicle travels through the Pennsylvania Bituminous King Coal Show parade as spectators watch from the roadside.
Community

The King Coal Show: Honoring Our Past, Celebrating Our Community

by Dave Plavi
June 30, 2026
Next Post
“Women belong in all places where decisions are being made.”

“Women belong in all places where decisions are being made.”

Comments 2

  1. Nancy says:
    5 years ago

    Wonderful progress!
    My mother was a Fordyce, descended from Samuel Fordyce, a Revolutionary War veteran. So, did Fordyces settle here?

    Reply
    • Danielle Nyland says:
      5 years ago

      Hello, Nancy. We at the GreeneScene can’t really answer that question. Whoever, a few good sources of information would be the Greene County Historical Society, Greene Connections (online) and Cornerstone Genealogical. Those places are an integral part of our article research.

      Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

The GreeneScene Podcast The GreeneScene Podcast The GreeneScene Podcast

Recommended

A smiling woman with long dark hair poses for a professional portrait against a black and gold background.

Golden Arches

May 22, 2026
Summer Time: Hunting and Cooking GROUNDHOG?

Summer Time: Hunting and Cooking GROUNDHOG?

March 5, 2026
A woman in western attire stands beside a horse in a sunny outdoor pasture setting.

Bridled Faith: Learning Leadership and Love at His Barn

May 22, 2026
A historic photograph shows spectators watching a harness horse race on a dirt track at an early county fair.

The Mount Morris Fair

June 26, 2026
A scenic view of Mon View Park in Greensboro features playgrounds, open grassy areas, large trees, and the Mon View Roller Rink and Community Center sign.

Mon View Park: A Hidden Gem

June 30, 2026
A rustic display inside a country gift shop features floral arrangements, ceramic frogs, decorative signs, and handcrafted home decor.

Summer in the Country

June 30, 2026
A train themed parade vehicle travels through the Pennsylvania Bituminous King Coal Show parade as spectators watch from the roadside.

The King Coal Show: Honoring Our Past, Celebrating Our Community

June 30, 2026
Five crowned fair royalty winners wearing sashes pose with bouquets in front of a pink and floral celebration backdrop.

Greene County Fair Queen Program Celebrates 40 years

June 30, 2026
Wilson Accounting Group Wilson Accounting Group Wilson Accounting Group

Archives

  • 2026
  • 2025
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • 2020
  • 2019
  • 2018

Recent Posts

  • Mon View Park: A Hidden Gem
  • Summer in the Country
  • The King Coal Show: Honoring Our Past, Celebrating Our Community

Categories

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Business
  • Business Spotlight
  • Community
  • Cool at School
  • Crowded Kitchen
  • Education
  • Events
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Good News in Greene
  • Government
  • Health & Wellness
  • Hometown Heritage
  • Leisure
  • Local History
  • Local People
  • Opinion
  • Outdoors
  • Pets
  • Piece of My Mind
  • Public Service
  • Religion
  • Scene and Heard
  • Seasonal
  • Special Interest
  • Sports
  • Supernatural
  • Towne Square
  • Uncategorized

© 2025 GreeneScene Magazine - A Direct Results Company

No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • Contests
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
    • Fair Food Favorites
    • Person Place or Thing
    • Where is This?
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company

© 2025 GreeneScene Magazine - A Direct Results Company

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.