TOHI
Welcome to
Your private Pennsylvania woodland getaway for unforgettable adventures, events, & accommodations…
Accommodations
Inspired By The Past
Tohi is a 300-acre woodland retreat in Upper Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where centuries of history are rooted in the land. Once part of Lenapehoking, the ancestral homeland of the Lenape people, the property later became home to a Dutch settler in the 1600s. During the Revolutionary War, Tohi was owned by Robert Mullen, proprietor of Philadelphia’s historic Tun Tavern, who volunteered his property to house and train colonial troops.
Throughout the 20th century, Tohi has served as a place for learning, gathering, and connection to nature. This forest began as one of the area’s earliest Boy Scout camps and later became Camp Tohikanee, a Girl Scout camp that welcomed generations of young people for service projects, leadership retreats, and time adventuring in the outdoors. Today, Tohi is a refuge—for wildlife, for people, and for the history held within these woodlands. Whether you're walking by one of the stone-lined trails, standing beneath old-growth trees, or sitting quietly by the Tohikon creek, you’re part of a long history of people who have found meaning here.
We’re honored to continue that story—and welcome you to be part of it.