I've often wondered why Long-A-Coming was renamed Berlin. There were a lot of German immigrants in PA. I suspect that has something to do with it.
Actually, I think the name change occurred to entice Germans to settle there. Let me use a Buena Vista Township example. Folsom (a.k.a. New Germany) was probably the earliest ethnic settlement in the Pines (c.1848). It is on the Long-A-Coming Trail. The Weymouth Land and Agricultural Company (Charles K. Landis, Vice-President) laid out roads in anticipation of the Camden and Atlantic (1854). Egg Harbor City, Pomona, Cologne, and Germania – German colonies – are planned along the railroad. By 1873 the northern portion of the original (1867) Buena Vista Township is called Germantown (including Newtonville). Germans were cheap labor for Hammonton until the Italians took on that role by the late 1870s. New Germany ceded from Buena Vista Township in 1906, attributed to bad roads connecting them to Buena, the government seat. The Borough left the Township after the battle of 1949.
Adapted from a slide for Trails, Inns, and Charcoal Stations of Old
Buena Vista: Little Known Places. Beers et al., 1872: 110
I'm presenting the above Trails talk at the Vineland Historical and Antiquarian Society on the evening of August 13, 2014.
S-M