Our home has been in the Spratt family since 1948, which seems a very short time when compared to the fact that our home is over 163 years old. The house was built in 1835, by Robert and Deborah (Colman) Townsend. Robert was the founder of the former Townsend Company in Fallston, which he established in 1828 after moving to New Brighton from Pittsburgh. After his death the home was owned by his descendants for four generations, son, William Penn Townsend, grandson, Edward Payson Townsend, great-grandson, Edward Critchlow Townsend, and great-great granddaughter, Betty Townsend Brosh.

On January 2, 1948, Mrs. Brosh and her husband Carl, sold the home and many of it's contents to Julia (Mack) Spratt and her children Joseph Jr., John, Mary Dean, Julia and James. Julia was the widow of the late Joseph J. Spratt and Brother Funeral Homes and passed away on January 10, 1945. This was the beginning of the J. Spratt Funeral Home. Upon her death March 29, 1957, the home was left to her children. It then became known as the J. & J. Spratt Funeral Home, under the management of her sons, John M. and James P. Spratt.
The home consists of four floors, 27 rooms, and five baths. The carriage house, with former servants quarters and stables, were located next door, and now consist of office space, garages, and a four-bedroom apartment on the second floor.

The saying goes, "if these walls could only talk," well if they would we could all sit for a while, to listen and learn about the history. Not only for our first fifty years, but also for the other one hundred and thirteen years before we took possession of what we believe to be one of the most splendid homes in the area.
The Spratt Family