Wrightstown Township, Bucks County, PA

Roofing, Siding & Windows in Wrightstown Township, PA
— Quoted in 15 Minutes.

Wrightstown is not one place but five — Penns Park, Pineville, Rushland, Wrightstown and Wycombe — and they were not built in one era. John Chapman cleared the first ground here in 1684 on a William Penn grant, the township lines were set by 1692, the village of Wrightstown grew around a 1721 Quaker Meeting house that the 1737 Walking Purchase stepped off from, and Rushland and Wycombe only appeared once the railroad came through in 1891. Five villages built three centuries apart mean no two Wrightstown houses are the same job — aerial imagery and a 3D model place the house in its village and against the floodplain map before the Zoom, and the written price follows in 15 minutes without a salesman at the door.

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About Wrightstown Township, PA

Five Villages,
Three Centuries Apart.

3,2782025 Est. Population
1684First Settler, John Chapman
1721Quaker Meeting House

The township's own history is plain about it: John Chapman emigrated from England in October 1684 and settled on land that was part of the original William Penn grant, the township boundaries were established by 1692, and the village of Wrightstown grew up around the Quaker Meeting house erected in 1721 — the same village that on September 19-20, 1737 was the beginning point of the Walking Purchase. Penns Park, the oldest of the five villages, was Logtown in 1716; Rushland and Wycombe only took shape after the railroad reached them in 1891. That five-village spread kept its subcounty count flat — 3,275 at the 2020 base, 3,278 by 2025 — a stable, low-density figure consistent with a rural-character township that has not urbanized since the 1891 railroad arrived. For exterior work the township reads as five distinct fabrics — a colonial Quaker core and a set of rail-era villages — not one uniform suburb.

What Shapes Exterior Work in Wrightstown

A Quaker Core, Rail Villages, and Floodplain.

A five-village township spanning an 18th-century Quaker settlement, two 1891 railroad villages, and mapped floodplain sets the terms here:

  • 1684 founding vs. 1891 railroad: John Chapman settled Penns Park — Logtown in 1716 — on a William Penn grant, while Rushland and Wycombe only took shape after the railroad came through in 1891; those two eras of construction have nothing in common in terms of roofline, wall assembly or original material, and the aerial is how we sort which one a given house belongs to before a spec is written.
  • Floodplain permit as a required step: Wrightstown’s own permit list at 2203 Second Street Pike includes both a Floodplain Permit and a Grading & Drainage Plan application as distinct line items, which means water-path review is a formal part of the process for low-lying lots — we determine whether a lot needs it from the aerial before the quote leaves our desk.
  • Village dispersal: Penns Park, Pineville, Rushland, Wrightstown and Wycombe sit apart across rolling township ground, so a job is scoped to its village and lot, not a township default.
  • Winter freeze-thaw on a three-century range of stock: an 18th-century Penns Park structure and a Wycombe house that followed the 1891 railroad age through the same humid-continental freeze-thaw winters and summer storm cycles at very different rates — the underlayment weight, flashing depth and cladding spec are matched to the real decade of construction, not to a township-wide average.

Every Wrightstown quote starts by settling two questions from the aerial: which of the five villages the house belongs to, and whether the lot sits in mapped floodplain.

Where We Work in & Around Wrightstown

18940 in the Council Rock Townships.

Wrightstown’s permit office — the Zoning, Code, and Land Development department at 2203 Second Street Pike — serves ZIP 18940 as its primary address, with the township’s five-village spread also reaching into 18946 and 18925; the entire township falls within the Council Rock School District alongside Newtown Borough and the Newtown, Northampton and Upper Makefield townships. We quote and install across all five villages and pull the permit through Zoning, Code, and Land Development on Second Street Pike:

18940 18946 18925 Newtown Borough Newtown Township Northampton Township Upper Makefield Township

From the Penns Park end of the township through Pineville, Rushland, the Wrightstown village core and Wycombe, every job is quoted by village and lot — the same aerial-first process that runs across all of Bucks County.

Services in Wrightstown Township, PA

Exterior Work for a Five-Village Township.

Same craftsmen, same materials, same warranties as any in-home contractor — without the in-home sales pitch.

Why Wrightstown Township Homeowners Choose D'Bros

Built for a Five-Village Township.

We Place the House in Its Village

Wrightstown's own history names five villages — Penns Park, Pineville, Rushland, Wrightstown and Wycombe — built across three centuries, from the 1721 Quaker core to the 1891 railroad villages. The aerial tells us which of Wrightstown’s five villages your home sits in and which century it was built in — the 1684-to-1721 Quaker core or the 1891 railroad era — and from that the roof, siding and opening specs follow the actual structure rather than any township-wide default.

One Department: 2203 Second Street Pike

Wrightstown runs permitting through its Zoning, Code, and Land Development department at 2203 Second Street Pike, reachable at 215-598-3313, with a Building/Zoning Permit plus Floodplain and Grading & Drainage applications on its list. We complete the application, file it there, fold in the floodplain and grading review when a lot needs it, and schedule the inspections so none of it lands on you.

Walking-Purchase Country, Read From the Air

The village of Wrightstown was the 1737 starting point of the Walking Purchase, and its five villages still sit scattered across rolling Bucks ground where a doorstep sales call burns an afternoon hunting for one address. Hand us the address instead and the five-village sprawl stops costing anyone an afternoon: the aerial and a 3D model produce the measurements and the work plan ahead of the call, the Second Street Pike packet is built around the floodplain and grading checks, and the installation crew becomes the one trip your lot ever sees.

Wrightstown Township FAQ

Questions Wrightstown Homeowners Ask.

How does the village my Wrightstown house sits in affect the exterior scope?
Five villages built across three centuries each carry their own assembly — the age and fabric are read from the aerial and the lot before anything is specified. A house in the colonial Quaker core around the 1721 Meeting house carries different rooflines and wall structure than one in Rushland or Wycombe, which only took shape after the 1891 railroad arrived.
Which Wrightstown department handles the permit, and does the floodplain trigger a separate application?
Wrightstown's Zoning, Code, and Land Development department at 2203 Second Street Pike, Wrightstown, PA 18940, phone 215-598-3313, hours Monday to Friday 8:00 am to 4:30 pm. Yes — floodplain does trigger a separate step: the department's own list includes both a Floodplain Permit and a Grading & Drainage Plan application alongside the standard Building/Zoning Permit. We prepare and submit the full application, fold in the floodplain and grading steps when the lot needs them, and carry every inspection.
How old is Wrightstown, and where did it start?
By the township's own history its first settler was John Chapman, who came from England in October 1684 and settled on a William Penn grant; the boundaries were set by 1692, the village of Wrightstown grew around a Quaker Meeting house erected in 1721, and on September 19-20, 1737 that village was the beginning point of the Walking Purchase. Five villages built across three centuries each carry their own assembly, so the house's age and village are the first things read off the aerial.
The permit list mentions a Floodplain Permit — does my lot need one before you can start?
Only if the lot sits in mapped floodplain — but we check that from the aerial and parcel data before quoting, not after. Wrightstown's Zoning, Code, and Land Development department lists a Floodplain Permit and a Grading & Drainage Plan application as distinct items, so for a low-lying lot those go into the packet alongside the standard Building/Zoning Permit; for lots that clear the floodplain map they don't apply.
My house is in Wrightstown but my ZIP is 18946 or 18925 — am I still in the Council Rock district?
Yes. The five-village spread of Wrightstown reaches across three ZIP codes — 18940 (the Second Street Pike address), 18946 and 18925 — and every parcel in the township falls within the Council Rock School District, which it shares with Newtown Borough and the Newtown, Northampton and Upper Makefield townships. Our coverage runs all five villages across all three ZIPs.
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15-Min Quote in Wrightstown —
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Fill out the form. Within 4 hours we'll text you to schedule your 15-min Zoom. We'll have a 3D visual plan of your Wrightstown home built before we get on the call.

  • 3D visual planning of your actual Wrightstown home, walked through together
  • Written quote in your inbox before the call ends
  • 100% financing available if you need it
  • Licensed & insured · NJ HIC Reg. #13VH10025100 · address used only for aerial measurement

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