Saint Peter Parish was founded in 1963, however, Mass was originally celebrated at Saint Mary Chapel in Elverson, until the church building was complete in 1967. It was always difficult times early on as there were only 89 families to start the parish, buy the land, and build the church building. The Archdiocese of Philadelphia often negotiated the purchase of the original land through the services of others since Catholics were not always accepted in the area at the time. Once the land was purchased, much of the early construction was not outsourced and parishioners spent weekends digging the basement, building the foundation, and setting the building. After many hours of manual labor, the church building was complete. On Saturday, December 9,1967, the parish’s first church building was dedicated with the pastor, Father Hoy, and Cardinal John Krol in attendance. This moment of joyful celebration was short lived since the original building was intended to eventually become a parish school when more construction was feasible. After father Hoy was transferred to another parish, the new pastor, Father Cox, started raising money to build a more permanent church.
Planning stalled in the year 2000 with the establishment of Saint Elizabeth Parish in Uwchlan which caused one third of Saint Peter Parish families to be assigned to the new parish. To make matters worse, it was discovered that the property at the time could not sustain the necessary facilities due to updated EPA and Waste Water standards. After many prayers, Archdiocesan land became available on Route 82 for a regional Catholic School and a new Saint Peter Church building. On March 18, 2008 the parish vacated the original Saint Peter Church and Cardinal Justin Rigali, Archbishop of Philadelphia, dedicated the first permanent church building. Today, our 89 original families have grown to nearly 2,000 families!