East Second Street (known as Warmoes, Land or Market Street and earlier just the Market Place or Plain) The original grants of lots along the Strand or first row were three hundred feet In depth (to what is now approximately Second Street). Behind these lots stretched the green or common land bounded roughly by what to now Second Street on the East, Harmony Street on the north, Fourth Street on the west, and Delaware Street on the south. Fourth Street was the continuation of Thwart Street, present Chestnut Street, as the main road from the fort to Delaware Street, which became the road to Maryland in 1671 after Augustine Herman's cartway was cleared. Between 1676 and 1880, Second Street was extended north to the foot dyke over the marsh which led to Swanwick. After William Penn's arrival In 1682, he set aside market days and the southeastern part of the green was designated as the market place. This added traffic and business soon turned the boundary line and foot patch along the back of the Strand lots Into a cartway and finally the named street of the "old Dutch map Until 1707, no parts were sold off the west end of the original Strand lots and no buildings were standing along the Green (Second Street) except the house of James Crawford near the corner of Second and Delaware Streets (1675). In 1707 Thomas Janvier and John Brewster sold to the committee for building a Presbyterian meeting house, two pieces of land totaling 50 feet In breadth along the green and In depth only 50 feet back on the Strand lots. At the time Second Street was lowered, the properties along the east side of the street gained 8 feet of ground.