Official state symbol Pennsylvania State Soil

Chester Soil Series

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Chester Soil Series

Official State Soil of Pennsylvania

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Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

State Soil of Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania's state soil is the Chester series, a deep, well-drained Alfisol covering the Piedmont of southeastern Pennsylvania, named after Chester County and grown under the Amish and Mennonite farms of Lancaster County that have produced corn, hay, and grain continuously since the 1700s. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state soils.
Status
Official state soil

Pennsylvania State Soil

Chester soil formed from the weathered residue of schist, phyllite, and gneiss — the ancient metamorphic rocks that underlie the Pennsylvania Piedmont. Hundreds of millions of years of chemical weathering broke the rock into a deep, loamy material. The resulting soil is well structured, moderately fertile, and well drained on the gently rolling Piedmont terrain.

Chester is an Alfisol, defined by an argillic horizon — a clay-enriched subsoil layer that formed as fine particles leached downward over long periods. The surface is brown loam. Below it, the subsoil turns yellowish brown to strong brown as clay and iron accumulated in the Bt horizon. At the base, partially weathered rock grades into soft saprolite.

The soil is slightly to moderately acidic throughout, with pH typically between 5.5 and 6.5. It responds well to liming and fertilization, which is why Chester County and Lancaster County farmers have sustained some of the highest non-irrigated crop yields in the Northeast for three centuries.

Why Pennsylvania Chose the Chester Soil

The Chester series is named after Chester County, Pennsylvania, where USDA soil scientists first formally described and mapped the series during the early twentieth century federal soil survey program. Chester County had one of the first systematic county soil surveys conducted in the United States.

The Soil Science Society of America recognizes Chester as Pennsylvania's state soil because it represents the Piedmont landscape that built the state's agricultural identity. The Piedmont arc from Philadelphia through Lancaster and York counties contains the flattest, deepest, most workable farmland in a state otherwise dominated by forested Appalachian ridges and rocky plateaus.

Chester was selected because it is both the most extensive series in Pennsylvania's most productive farming region and the soil most associated with the continuous, high-density agriculture of southeastern Pennsylvania — the farm belt that has operated without interruption since William Penn's first settlers arrived in the 1680s.

Chester Soil Profile and Horizons

Measured Chester profile with distinct horizons exposed beside a scale
A measured Chester profile exposes the horizon sequence soil scientists use to identify the series. Official USDA descriptions classify soils by recurring depth, texture, drainage, and parent material patterns.

Digging into Chester soil shows a profile shaped by deep weathering of ancient rock. The surface is brown loam, crumbly and workable. Below it, the soil transitions to a yellowish brown to strong brown clay-enriched subsoil — the argillic horizon where iron and clay have accumulated over thousands of years. At the base, the rock has not fully broken down, leaving a pale saprolite that crumbles in the hand.

0" 10" 20" 34" 46" 58" 78"
Ap
Bt1
Bt2
Bt3
BC
C
Cultivated surface 0–10 in
silt loam
organic-rich silt loam; workable and well structured
Upper argillic 10–20 in
silty clay loam
clay accumulation begins; iron gives yellow-brown color
Middle argillic 20–34 in
clay loam
peak clay and iron zone; compact but permeable
Lower argillic 34–46 in
clay loam to loam
clay declining; transitioning toward parent material
Transitional layer 46–58 in
loam
mixing zone of soil and weathered bedrock fragments
Saprolite 58+ in
variable loam
soft weathered schist-gneiss; mica flakes visible

Where Chester Soil Grows in Pennsylvania

Landscape associated with Chester in Pennsylvania
A landscape scene from Pennsylvania. Chester is associated with the broader terrain where the series is most often mapped.

Chester soil covers the gently rolling uplands of the Pennsylvania Piedmont, the narrow lowland belt between the fall line near Philadelphia and the Blue Ridge foothills to the north and west. It sits on well-drained ridges and slopes where the metamorphic bedrock has weathered deeply and erosion has not stripped the profile.

The soil is most extensive in Chester, Lancaster, York, Adams, and Delaware counties — the core of the southeastern Pennsylvania farm belt — and extends into Montgomery, Bucks, and Berks counties where Piedmont topography and metamorphic bedrock continue.

Chester Soil Series · 10 counties
Other counties

Farming and Forests on Chester Soil

Field or habitat scene associated with Chester in Pennsylvania
A field or habitat scene from Pennsylvania. Chester is tied to the working landscape and plant communities described for this state soil.

Corn and hay are the defining crops. Lancaster County, centered on Chester soil, consistently ranks among the top agricultural counties in the eastern United States by total farm output — a product of deep, fertile Chester soil farmed intensively by Amish and Mennonite communities who have avoided the land fragmentation and abandonment that reduced farming elsewhere in the Northeast.

Soybeans and winter wheat complete the standard Chester soil rotation. Tobacco was a historic crop of the Lancaster County Piedmont through most of the twentieth century, with Pennsylvania producing cigar-leaf tobacco in quantities second only to Connecticut in the Northeast. Chester soil's depth and drainage suited tobacco well.

Mushrooms are the most distinctive Chester County crop. Chester County produces more mushrooms than any other county in the United States — roughly half the national supply. Mushroom houses are built on Chester soil farmland and fed with composted straw and manure, using the land's flat terrain and nearby markets for what became a billion-dollar local industry.

Where Chester soil is forested, the canopy is tulip poplar, red oak, white oak, and hickory — the same Piedmont hardwood mix that covered the land before European settlement. Tulip poplar colonizes abandoned Chester soil fields faster than any other tree, and its straight trunks made it a preferred timber for Pennsylvania's colonial builders.

Chester Soil Facts

Quick Answers

What is Pennsylvania's state soil?
Pennsylvania's state soil is the Chester series, a deep, well-drained Alfisol that covers the Piedmont of southeastern Pennsylvania. It formed from weathered schist, phyllite, and gneiss and supports the corn, hay, soybeans, and mushrooms grown in Lancaster and Chester counties.
Why is it called Chester soil?
The Chester series is named after Chester County, Pennsylvania, where USDA soil scientists first formally described and mapped the series during early twentieth century federal soil surveys. Chester County was one of the first counties in the country to receive a systematic soil survey.
What color is Chester soil?
The surface is brown to dark brown silt loam from organic matter. The argillic subsoil transitions from yellowish brown in the upper Bt horizon to strong brown in the middle Bt — the iron-rich clay accumulation zone. The deepest layers are pale yellow to gray saprolite where mica flakes from the original schist are still visible.
Where is Chester soil found in Pennsylvania?
Chester soil is found on the gently rolling uplands of the Pennsylvania Piedmont, primarily in Chester, Lancaster, York, Adams, Delaware, and Montgomery counties in the southeastern corner of the state. It occupies the well-drained ridges and slopes where metamorphic bedrock has weathered deeply.
What grows in Chester soil?
Corn, hay, soybeans, and winter wheat are the main field crops. Chester County grows roughly half of all commercial mushrooms in the United States on Chester soil farmland. Tobacco was a major crop in Lancaster County through the twentieth century. Where land stays forested, tulip poplar, red oak, white oak, and hickory are the dominant trees.
Who chose Chester as Pennsylvania's state soil?
The Soil Science Society of America recognizes the Chester series as Pennsylvania's state soil, representing the Piedmont Alfisol that underlies the state's most productive and continuously farmed agricultural region.
How deep is Chester soil?
Chester soil is deep — the true soil profile, from the surface through the argillic Bt horizons, typically extends four to five feet before transitioning into saprolite. The saprolite layer of soft, partially weathered schist and gneiss can extend many feet further, providing good rooting depth for deep-rooted crops and trees.

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