Charles William Macfarlane
1852–1931
Charles William Macfarlane was the earliest architect and builder who operated south of the railroad at Elm Station. After earning a civil engineering degree from Lehigh University, he designed and constructed houses in West Philadelphia, then in 1889 came to Elm Station.
He acquired about 30½ acres of the William Thomas estate south of the railroad (Deed Book 335, page 212, recorded May 10, 1889), laid out Elmwood, Woodside, Readrah (later Maple) and Thomas (later South Essex) Avenues, and on a 128-lot plan designed, constructed and sold 24 houses, all still standing in 2025.
His "elegant" water supply and drainage system, which included a photogenic water tower, was so envied by the Narberth Park community north of the tracks, that they petitioned the county to incorporate as a borough in 1893–94 in order to obtain a similar system.

Unlike his counterpart at Narberth Park, John J. Ridgway, Macfarlane lived in his creation, at 120 Woodside Avenue.
Updated March 17, 2025.
U. S. Census
| Census | Age | Race | Gender | Marital | Relation | Address | Immigrated | Birthplace | Father's | Mother's | As transcribed | Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1900 | 50 | White | Male | Married | Head | 120 Woodside Ave. | Pennsylvania | Pennsylvania | Pennsylvania | Chs W Mc Farland | 120 Woodside | ||
Census Households
| Census | Name | Relation | Age | Own | Race | Marital | Birthplace | Business | Trade | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1900 | Charles William Macfarlane | Head | 50 | Own | White | Married | Pennsylvania | Builder | ||
| Kathleen Selfridge Macfarlane | Wife | 50 | White | Married | Pennsylvania |
Charles William Macfarlane on FamilySearch (census & other records; requires free account)