SCHEDULE 14A
                                 (Rule 14a-101)

                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT

                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
           Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                      Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. )

Filed by the registrant [X]
Filed by a party other than the registrant [ ]

Check the appropriate box:
[ ] Preliminary Proxy Statement  [ ] Confidential, for use of the Commission
                                     Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
[x] Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ] Definitive Additional Materials
[ ] Soliciting Material pursuant to Rule 14a-12

                           WSFS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if Other Than the Registrant)

Payment of filing fee (Check the appropriate box):
  [X] No fee required
  [ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

          (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (3) Per unit price or other underlying  value of transaction  computed
pursuant  to Exchange  Act Rule 0-11.  (set forth the amount on which the filing
fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (5)  Total fee paid:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  [ ] Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

  [ ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as  provided  by  Exchange  Act
Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and identify the filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
previously.  Identify the previous filing by registration  statement  number, or
the form or schedule and the date of its filing.

          (1) Amount previously paid:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement no.:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (3) Filing Party:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
          (4) Date Filed:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                           WSFS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                                838 Market Street
                           Wilmington, Delaware 19801
                                 (302) 792-6000


                                                                  March 21, 2003






Dear Stockholder:

I am pleased to invite you to attend the Annual Meeting of  Stockholders of WSFS
Financial  Corporation  (the  "Company"),  to be held at the  Delaware  National
Country Club, 400 Hercules Road, Wilmington,  Delaware 19808 on Thursday,  April
24, 2003 at 4:00 p.m. At this meeting,  stockholders will be asked to consider a
proposal to re-elect  four  directors  whose terms are  expiring,  to ratify the
appointment of independent  auditors and to approve amendments to the 1997 Stock
Option Plan.

Your vote is important  regardless  of how many shares of Company stock you own.
If you hold  stock in more than one  account or name,  you will  receive a proxy
card for each account.  Please sign and return each card since each represents a
separate  number  of  shares.  Postage-paid  envelopes  are  provided  for  your
convenience.

You are cordially  invited to attend the Annual  Meeting.  REGARDLESS OF WHETHER
YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE ANNUAL MEETING,  WE URGE YOU TO SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE
ENCLOSED  PROXY CARD AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.  This will not prevent you from voting
in person but will  assure that your vote is counted if you are unable to attend
the meeting.

                                 Sincerely,


                                 /s/ Marvin N. Schoenhals
                                 -----------------------------------------------
                                 Marvin N. Schoenhals
                                 Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer




                           WSFS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                                838 Market Street
                           Wilmington, Delaware 19801

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                          To be held on April 24, 2003


To the Stockholders:

Notice is hereby given that the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of WSFS Financial
Corporation (the "Company") will be held at the Delaware  National Country Club,
400 Hercules Road,  Wilmington,  Delaware 19808 on Thursday,  April 24, 2003, at
4:00 p.m., for the purpose of considering and acting upon the following:

1.   Election of four directors for terms of three years each;

2.   Ratification of the appointment of independent auditors for the fiscal year
     ending December 31, 2003;

3.   Approval of amendments to the 1997 Stock Option Plan;

4.   Such  other  matters  as  may  properly  come  before  the  meeting  or any
     adjournment thereof.

Any  action  may be taken on any one of the  foregoing  proposals  at the Annual
Meeting on the date specified  above or any date or dates to which,  by original
or  later  adjournment,  the  Annual  Meeting  may be  adjourned.  The  Board of
Directors  has fixed the close of business on March 14, 2003, as the record date
for the determination of stockholders entitled to notice of, and to vote, at the
Annual Meeting and any adjournment thereof.

You are  requested  to fill in and sign  the  enclosed  form of  proxy  which is
solicited  by the Board of  Directors  and to mail it promptly  in the  enclosed
envelope.  The proxy  will not be used if you  attend  and vote in person at the
Annual Meeting.

                                           BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS,


                                           /s/ Mark A. Turner
                                           -------------------------------------
                                           Mark A. Turner
                                           Chief Operating Officer,
                                           Chief Financial Officer and Secretary

March 21, 2003

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IMPORTANT:  THE PROMPT  RETURN OF PROXIES  WILL SAVE YOUR COMPANY THE EXPENSE OF
FURTHER  REQUESTS  FOR  PROXIES  IN ORDER TO ENSURE A QUORUM.  A  SELF-ADDRESSED
ENVELOPE IS ENCLOSED FOR YOUR  CONVENIENCE.  NO POSTAGE IS REQUIRED IF MAILED IN
THE UNITED STATES.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           WSFS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                                838 Market Street
                           Wilmington, Delaware 19801
                                 (302) 792-6000

                                 PROXY STATEMENT

           ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS TO BE HELD ON APRIL 24, 2003


This Proxy  Statement  and the  accompanying  proxy card are being  furnished to
stockholders  of WSFS  Financial  Corporation  (the  "Company")  by the Board of
Directors in connection  with the  solicitation of proxies for use at the Annual
Meeting of  Stockholders of the Company to be held on April 24, 2003, and at any
adjournments  or  postponements  thereof  (the  "Annual  Meeting").  This  Proxy
Statement and the accompanying proxy card are first being mailed to stockholders
on or about March 24, 2003.

                       VOTING AND REVOCABILITY OF PROXIES

Proxies  solicited  by the Board of  Directors  of the Company  will be voted in
accordance  with  the  directions  given  therein.  Where  no  instructions  are
indicated,  proxies  will be voted FOR the nominees  for  directors  and for the
other  proposals  as set forth  herein.  By signing,  dating and  returning  the
enclosed proxy, you will give us the discretionary authority to vote your shares
for the  election  of any person we choose as a  director  in the event that any
nominee is unable or refuses to serve as a  director.  You will also give us the
discretionary  authority  to vote on any matters  relating to the conduct of the
Annual  Meeting.  If any other  business  is  presented  at the Annual  Meeting,
proxies will be voted by those named herein in accordance with the determination
of a majority of the Board of Directors.

Stockholders  who execute  proxies  retain the right to revoke them at any time.
Unless so revoked,  the shares  represented by properly executed proxies will be
voted at the Annual  Meeting  and any  adjournments  or  postponements  thereof.
Proxies may be revoked by written notice to the Secretary of the Company sent to
the address  above or by the filing of a later dated proxy prior to a vote being
taken on the  proposal  at the  Annual  Meeting.  A proxy will not be voted if a
stockholder  attends the Annual  Meeting and votes in person.  The presence of a
stockholder  at the Annual  Meeting  alone will not  revoke  such  stockholder's
proxy.

                 VOTING SECURITIES AND PRINCIPAL HOLDERS THEREOF

The securities  entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting  consist of the Company's
common  stock,  $.01 par value per share (the  "Common  Stock"),  the holders of
which are  entitled  to one vote for each share of Common  Stock held, except in
elections of directors,  in which holders have  cumulative  voting  rights.  The
close of  business  on March  14,  2003 has been  fixed as the  record  date for
determination of stockholders  entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the Annual
Meeting (the "Record  Date").  As of the Record Date,  the Company had 8,142,832
shares of Common Stock outstanding.  The presence, in person or by proxy, of the
holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of Common Stock entitled to vote
at the Annual Meeting is required for a quorum.

                                       1



As to the election of directors  (Proposal  1), the proxy being  provided by the
Board enables a stockholder to vote for the election of the nominees proposed by
the Board,  or to  withhold  authority  to vote for one or more of the  nominees
being  proposed.  Directors  are elected by a  plurality  of votes of the shares
present in person or  represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting and entitled to
vote in the election of directors.

Ratification  of the appointment of the Company's  independent  auditors for the
fiscal year ending December 31, 2003 (Proposal 2), requires the affirmative vote
of a  majority  of the votes  actually  cast in person or by proxy at the Annual
Meeting.  Approval of the  amendments to the 1997 Stock Option Plan (Proposal 3)
requires the affirmative  vote of a majority of the votes eligible to be cast in
person  or by proxy at the  Annual  Meeting.  With  regard  to the  election  of
directors,  votes may be cast in favor of, or withheld from, each nominee; votes
that are  withheld  will be  excluded  entirely  from the vote and will  have no
effect.  Abstentions  may be specified on all  proposals  except the election of
directors  and will be counted as present for  purposes of the proposal on which
the  abstention is noted.  Abstentions on the proposal to approve the amendments
to the  1997  Stock  Option  Plan  will  have the  effect  of a  negative  vote.
Abstentions  will have no effect on the  proposal  to ratify  the  selection  of
independent  auditors. A broker non-vote (i.e., proxies from brokers or nominees
indicating that such persons have not received  instructions from the beneficial
owners or other persons as to certain  proposals on which such beneficial owners
or  persons  are  entitled  to vote their  shares but with  respect to which the
brokers or nominees  have no  discretionary  power to vote their shares  without
such  instruction)  will have no  effect on the  election  of  directors  or the
ratification of the appointment of independent auditors but will have the effect
of a negative  vote on the approval of the  amendments  to the 1997 Stock Option
Plan.  Brokers  who do not  receive  instructions  are  entitled  to vote on the
election of directors and the  ratification  of the  appointment  of independent
auditors pursuant to discretionary  voting authority but are not entitled to use
their discretionary voting authority to vote on the amendments to the 1997 Stock
Option  Plan.  Concerning  any other  matter that may  properly  come before the
Annual Meeting, all such matters shall be determined by a majority of votes cast
affirmatively or negatively without regard to broker non-votes, unless otherwise
required by law.

Stock Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners

Persons and groups  beneficially  owning in excess of 5% of the Common Stock are
required to file certain reports with respect to such ownership  pursuant to the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"). The following
table sets forth, as of the Record Date, certain information as to those persons
who have filed the reports required of persons  beneficially owning more than 5%
of the Common  Stock or who were known to the Company to  beneficially  own more
than 5% of the Company's Common Stock outstanding at the Record Date.

                                       2



                                            Amount and Nature
                                              Of Beneficial      Percent
Name                                          Ownership (1)      of Class
----                                       ------------------    --------

R. Ted Weschler (2)                         1,332,500 shares     16.36%
Peninsula Capital Advisors, LLC
Peninsula Partners, L.P.
4048 East Main Street
Charlottesville, VA 22902

Quaker Capital Management Corporation (3)    791,235 shares       9.72%
401 Wood Street, Suite 1300
Pittsburgh, PA 15222

Wellington Management Company, LLP (4)       502,600 shares       6.17%
75 State Street
Boston, MA 02109
--------------------
(1)  In  accordance  with Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act, for the purposes of
     this table, a person is deemed to be the beneficial  owner of any shares of
     Common  Stock if he or she has or shares  voting or  investment  power with
     respect to such Common Stock or has a right to acquire beneficial ownership
     at any time within 60 days from the Record Date.  As used  herein,  "voting
     power" is the power to vote or direct the voting of shares and  "investment
     power" is the power to dispose or direct the disposition of shares.  Except
     as otherwise  noted,  ownership is direct,  and the named  individuals  and
     group exercise sole voting power over the shares of the Common Stock.

(2)  Includes 1,328,000 shares owned by Peninsula Partners,  L.P., an investment
     partnership and Peninsula  Capital  Advisors,  LLC, an investment  advisory
     firm,  both of which are  controlled by R. Ted Weschler,  a director of the
     Company.  Mr.  Weschler  disclaims  beneficial  ownership of these  shares.
     Shares also include  2,500 shares held  directly by Mr.  Weschler and 2,000
     shares of Common Stock that may be acquired through the exercise of options
     within 60 days of the Record Date.

(3)  According to the Statement on Schedule 13G/A of Quaker  Capital  Management
     Corporation  filed on February  14,  2003,  761,060  shares are held by its
     investment advisory clients as to which it disclaims beneficial  ownership.
     Quaker  Capital  Management  Corporation  has shared voting and  investment
     power with respect to 433,760 shares.

(4)  According  to the  Statement  on Schedule  13G/A of  Wellington  Management
     Company,  LLP filed on February 12, 2003, shares are held by its investment
     advisory clients as to which it shares voting or investment power.

             INTEREST OF CERTAIN PERSONS IN MATTERS TO BE ACTED UPON

Officers,  directors and Associates of the Company and its subsidiaries  have an
interest in a matter being presented for stockholder approval.  Upon stockholder
approval of the  amendments to the 1997 Stock Option Plan,  officers,  directors
and  Associates of the Company and its  subsidiaries  may be granted  additional
stock options under the 1997 Stock Option Plan.  The approval of the  amendments
to the 1997 Stock Option Plan is presented herein as Proposal 3.


                                      3




                      PROPOSAL 1 -- ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

The number of  directors  is  currently  fixed at eleven  members.  The Board of
Directors is divided into three  classes.  The members of each class are elected
for a term of three years and until their  successors are elected and qualified;
provided that in the event the number of directors has been increased during the
preceding  year and such new  directorships  have  been  filled by action of the
Board of Directors,  the terms of those newly appointed  directors expire at the
annual  meeting  when the class to which they have been elected  expires.  Other
than Mr.  Dale E. Wolf,  a director  emeritus  of the Bank,  each of the current
members of the Board of  Directors  of the  Company  also serves on the Board of
Directors  of  the  Company's  principal  subsidiary,  Wilmington  Savings  Fund
Society,  Federal Savings Bank ("WSFS" or the "Bank").  Directors of the Company
are  elected  by a  plurality  vote of the  outstanding  shares of Common  Stock
present in person or represented by proxy at the Annual Meeting.

Pursuant to the Company's Certificate of Incorporation, every stockholder voting
for the  election of  directors  is  entitled  to  cumulate  his or her votes by
multiplying his or her shares times the number of directors to be elected.  Each
stockholder  will be  entitled  to cast his or her  votes  for one  director  or
distribute  his or her votes among any number of the nominees  being voted on at
the Annual Meeting. The Board of Directors intends to vote the proxies solicited
by it equally among the four  nominees of the Board of  Directors.  Stockholders
may not  cumulate  their  votes on the form of proxy  solicited  by the Board of
Directors. In order to cumulate votes,  stockholders must attend the meeting and
vote in person or make  arrangements  with their own proxies.  Unless  otherwise
specified in the proxy,  however, the right is reserved,  in the sole discretion
of the Board of Directors, to distribute votes among some or all of the nominees
of the Board of  Directors  in a manner  other  than  equally  so as to elect as
directors the maximum possible number of such nominees.

At the Annual  Meeting,  it is expected that four  directors will be elected for
terms of three  years each and until  their  successors  have been  elected  and
qualified.  The  Board of  Directors  has  nominated  Linda C.  Drake,  David E.
Hollowell,  Claibourne D. Smith and Eugene W. Weaver,  all of whom are currently
directors,  for election as directors at the Annual  Meeting.  If any nominee is
unable to serve, the shares represented by all properly executed proxies will be
voted  for the  election  of such  substitute  as the  Board  of  Directors  may
recommend.  Alternatively, the Board of Directors may elect to reduce the number
of authorized directors to eliminate the vacancy.



The Board of  Directors  Recommends  Voting  "FOR" the  Directors  Nominated  in
Proposal One.

                                       4




Directors and Nominees

The following  table sets forth  information  for each nominee and each director
continuing  in office.  It includes  their name,  age (as of December 31, 2002),
year first elected or appointed as a director of the Company, year of expiration
of current term as a director of the Company,  principal occupation for at least
the last five years and  directorships  in  subsidiaries  of the  Company and in
other companies:





                               Year First      Current
                               Elected or       Term
                                Appointed        to
Name                     Age    Director       Expire         Principal Occupation            Directorship(s)
----                    ----    --------       ------         --------------------            ---------------
                                       NOMINEES FOR A TERM TO EXPIRE IN 2006

                                                                            

Linda C. Drake          54         1999         2003      Founder and Chair                   WSFS;
                                                          TCIM Services, Inc.                 TCIM Services, Inc.;
                                                          (a direct marketing and             LTD Direct
                                                          business services company)

David E. Hollowell      55         1996         2003      Executive Vice President and        WSFS
                                                          University Treasurer
                                                          University of Delaware

Claibourne D. Smith     64         1994         2003      Vice President - Technology and     WSFS
                                                          Professional Development, E.I.
                                                          duPont de Nemours & Company,
                                                          Incorporated, (multinational
                                                          chemical and energy company)
                                                          (1964-1998) (retired)

Eugene W. Weaver        70         1998         2003      Vice President of Finance of        WSFS;
                                                          John W. Rollins & Associates        Dover Motorsports, Inc.
                                                          (Investment Management
                                                          Company), Chief Financial
                                                          Officer/Senior Vice President
                                                          of Dover Downs Entertainment,
                                                          Inc. (1970-1999) (retired)


                                       5






                               Year First     Current
                               Elected or      Term
                                Appointed       to
Name                     Age    Director      Expire         Principal Occupation            Directorship(s)
----                    ----    --------      ------         --------------------            ---------------
                                    DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE

                                                                          

John F. Downey          65        1998         2004      Executive Director of the           WSFS
                                                         Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS),
                                                         1989-1998 (retired)

Thomas P. Preston       56        1990         2004      Partner, Blank Rome, LLP;           WSFS
                                                         previously Partner,
                                                         Reed Smith, LLP and
                                                         Duane, Morris & Heckscher LLP
                                                         (Law firms)

Marvin N. Schoenhals    55        1990         2004      Chairman of WSFS Financial          WSFS;
                                                         Corporation since 1992; President   WSFS Credit Corporation;
                                                         and Chief Executive Officer of      WSFS Investment Group, Inc.;
                                                         WSFS Financial Corporation          WSFS Reit Inc;
                                                         since November 1990                 Federal Home Loan Bank of
                                                                                             Pittsburgh;
                                                                                             Brandywine Fund, Inc.;
                                                                                             Brandywine Blue Fund, Inc.;
                                                                                             Brandywine Advisors Fund, Inc.

R. Ted Weschler         41        1992         2004      Managing Member,                    WSFS;
                                                         Peninsula Capital Advisors, LLC,    Virginia National Bank;
                                                         an investment advisory firm;        First Avenue Networks, Inc.
                                                         October 1989 to December 1999,
                                                         Partner and Officer of Quad-C,
                                                         Inc., a Delaware corporation which
                                                         acts as the general partner for
                                                         several investment partnerships

Charles G. Cheleden     59        1990         2005      October 1992 to present: Vice       WSFS
                                                         Chairman of WSFS Financial
                                                         Corporation; August 1990 to
                                                         October 1992: Chairman, WSFS
                                                         Financial Corporation;
                                                         January 1990 to present:
                                                         self-employed attorney

Joseph R. Julian        65        1988         2005      President, JJID, Inc.               WSFS;
                                                         (highway construction company)      JJID, Inc.

Dale E. Wolf            78        1993         2005      March 1998 to present:              WSFS (emeritus);
                                                         Vice Chairman of WSFS               WSFS Credit Corp.;
                                                         Financial Corporation;              Emerald BioAgriculture
                                                         1989-1993, Lieutenant               Corporation;
                                                         Governor/Governor of the            Socratic Law.com
                                                         State of Delaware





                                       6

Stock Ownership of Management

The  following  table sets forth,  as of the Record  Date,  the amount of Common
Stock  beneficially  owned  by the  Company's  directors,  by each of the  named
executive officers in the Summary  Compensation  Table, and by all directors and
executive officers as a group:

                                        Amount and Nature
                                          of Beneficial              Percent
Name                                      Ownership (1)            of Class (2)
----                                    -----------------          ------------
Charles G. Cheleden (3)(4)                  37,600 shares              *
John F. Downey (4)(5)                        4,900 shares              *
Linda C. Drake (6)                           3,700 shares              *
David E. Hollowell (4)                      11,500 shares              *
Joseph R. Julian (4)                        63,676 shares              *
Thomas P. Preston (4)(7)                     6,010 shares              *
Marvin N. Schoenhals (8)                   398,852 shares            4.76%
Claibourne D. Smith (4)                      5,730 shares              *
Eugene W. Weaver (4)(9)                      9,500 shares              *
R. Ted Weschler (4)(10)                  1,332,500 shares           16.36%
Dale E. Wolf (4)                            26,140 shares              *
Karl L. Johnston (11)                       57,574 shares              *
Mark A. Turner (12)                         83,009 shares            1.01%
Deborah A. Powell (13)                      12,407 shares              *
Directors and executive officers
  as a group (14 persons)                2,053,098 shares           24.06%


--------------------
*    Less than 1.0%.
(1)  For purposes of this table, a person is deemed to be the  beneficial  owner
     of any shares of Common Stock over which he or she has or shares  voting or
     investment power or of which he or she has the right to acquire  beneficial
     ownership within 60 days of the Record Date. As used herein, "voting power"
     is the power to vote or direct the voting of shares and "investment  power"
     is the power to dispose or direct the disposition of shares.  Other than as
     noted  below,  all  persons  shown in the table  above have sole voting and
     investment  power,  except  that  the  following  directors  and  executive
     officers held the following numbers of shares jointly with their respective
     spouses:  Mr.  Cheleden,   16,500  shares;  Ms  Drake,  2,500  shares;  Mr.
     Hollowell,  7,000 shares; Mr. Julian,  59,176 shares;  Mr. Johnston,  1,500
     shares; and Mr. Turner, 7,780 shares.
(2)  In calculating  the percentage  ownership of each named  individual and the
     group, the number of shares  outstanding is deemed to include any shares of
     the Common Stock which the individual or the group has the right to acquire
     within 60 days of the Record Date.
(3)  Includes  16,700  shares of Common Stock held in an  Individual  Retirement
     Account ("IRA"),  2,200 shares of Common Stock which are held in an IRA for
     Mr.  Cheleden's  wife,  200 shares of Common  Stock held by Mr.  Cheleden's
     children,  over  which he has power of  attorney.  Mr.  Cheleden  disclaims
     beneficial ownership of his wife's shares.
(4)  Includes  2,000  shares of Common  Stock that may be  acquired  through the
     exercise of options within 60 days of the Record Date.
(5)  Includes 600 shares of Common Stock held in an IRA.
(6)  Includes  1,200  shares of Common  Stock that may be  acquired  through the
     exercise of options within 60 days of the Record Date.
(7)  Includes 1,275 shares of Common Stock held in an IRA.
(8)  Includes 33,179 shares of Common Stock held in Mr.  Schoenhals'  account in
     the  Company's  401(k) Plan and 244,326  shares of Common Stock that may be
     acquired through the exercise of options within 60 days of the Record Date.
(9)  Includes  1,000  shares of Common  Stock held in an IRA and 1,000 shares of
     Common Stock held by Mr.  Weaver's  wife. Mr. Weaver  disclaims  beneficial
     ownership of his wife's shares.
(10) Includes 1,328,000 shares held by Peninsula  Partners,  L.P., an investment
     firm managed by Peninsula  Capital  Advisors,  LLC of which Mr. Weschler is
     the Managing Member.  Mr. Weschler  disclaims  beneficial  ownership of the
     shares held by Peninsula Partners, L.P.

                       (Footnotes continued on next page)


                                       7




(11) Includes 5,074 shares of Common Stock held in Mr. Johnston's account in the
     Company's  401(k)  Plan and  51,000  shares  of  Common  Stock  that may be
     acquired through the exercise of options within 60 days of the Record Date.
(12) Includes 7,841 shares of Common Stock held in Mr.  Turner's  account in the
     Company's  401(k)  Plan and  64,888  shares  of  Common  Stock  that may be
     acquired through the exercise of options within 60 days of the Record Date.
(13) Includes  1,227 shares of Common  Stock held in Ms Powell's  account in the
     Company's  401(k)  Plan and  11,180  shares  of  Common  Stock  that may be
     acquired through the exercise of options within 60 days of the Record Date.


Meetings and Committees of the Board of Directors

The Board of  Directors  conducts  its  business  through its  meetings  and the
meetings of its committees. During the year ended December 31, 2002 the Board of
Directors  held 10 meetings.  All directors  attended more than 75% of the total
aggregate  meetings of the Board of Directors and committees on which such Board
member served during this period.

A list of the Committees of the Board of Directors and a general  description of
their respective duties follows.

Executive Committee.  The Executive Committee is scheduled to meet one time each
month and as needed,  and exercises the powers of the Board of Directors between
meetings of the Board. The Executive  Committee is presently  composed of Marvin
N.  Schoenhals,  Chairman,  Charles G. Cheleden,  David E. Hollowell,  Eugene W.
Weaver and R. Ted Weschler. The Executive Committee met 20 times during 2002.

Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee. During 2002 the Board created the
Corporate  Governance and Nominating  Committee  consisting of directors who are
not officers of the Company.  The purpose of this committee is: (i) to recommend
to the Board the corporate governance  guidelines and policies applicable to the
Company; (ii) to assist the Board by identifying individuals qualified to become
Board  members,  (iii) to recommend  to the Board the director  nominees for the
next annual meeting of stockholders, (iv) to lead the Board in its annual review
of the Board's performance,  and (v) to recommend to the Board director nominees
to each  committee.  The Committee  will also consider  nominees  recommended by
stockholders  in accordance  with the  procedures set forth in the bylaws of the
Company.  Present members of the Corporate  Governance and Nominating  Committee
are Charles G.  Cheleden,  Chairman,  Linda C.  Drake,  Dale E. Wolf and John F.
Downey. The Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee met twice during 2002.

Audit  Committee.  The Audit  Committee  is  composed of  directors  who are not
officers of the Company.  The Board of Directors  has adopted a written  charter
for the Audit  Committee.  The Committee  oversees the audit program and reviews
the  financial  statements of the Company and its  subsidiaries.  It reviews the
examination  reports of federal  regulatory  agencies  as well as reports of the
internal auditors and independent auditors.  The Audit Committee meets quarterly
with the head of the  Audit  Department  and  representatives  of the  Company's
independent auditors, with and without representatives of management present, to
review accounting and auditing matters, to review financial  statements prior to
their  public  release.  They also meet  annually to review the  Company's  risk
analysis  and  associated  audit  plan.  The  Board of  Directors  appoints  the
independent  auditors upon the  recommendation  of the Audit Committee.  Present
members  of the Audit  Committee  are  Thomas P.  Preston,  Chairman,  Joseph R.
Julian,  John F. Downey and Eugene W. Weaver. Each member of the Audit Committee
is "independent" as defined in the listing standards of the National Association
of  Securities  Dealers.  The Audit  Committee met nine times during fiscal year
2002.

                                       8





Personnel and Compensation  Committee.  The Personnel and Compensation Committee
("Personnel  Committee")  is composed of  directors  who are not officers of the
Company.  The  Personnel  Committee  reviews  and  recommends  to the  Board  of
Directors,  for their approval,  the  compensation and benefits of the executive
officers,  broad guidelines for the salary and benefits  administration of other
officers and Associates,  and the  compensation of directors.  In addition,  the
Personnel  Committee is responsible for the overseeing the administration of the
1986 Stock Option Plan and the 1997 Stock Option Plan (the "Stock Option Plans")
and the executive  incentive plans,  including  recommendations  to the Board of
Directors  for  awards  under  such  plans.  Present  members  of the  Personnel
Committee are David E. Hollowell,  Chairman, Linda C. Drake, Claibourne D. Smith
and R. Ted Weschler. The Personnel Committee met two times during 2002.

Directors'  Compensation.  During 2002, each non-Associate  director received an
annual  retainer of $9,000 plus 500 shares of the  Company's  Common Stock and a
grant of 1,000 shares under the 1997 Stock  Option Plan.  Chairpersons  of board
committees or subsidiary  boards received an additional  $1,000 annual retainer,
and each  member of a  committee  or  subsidiary  board  received  $400 for each
meeting  attended.  Mr.  Schoenhals does not receive  director fees as Chairman,
President and Chief  Executive  Officer.  Beginning in June 2002,  Mr.  Cheleden
received  monthly  compensation  of $1,500 in lieu of a meeting fee for chairing
the Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee.  He received meeting fees for
other meetings attended.

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

Marvin N.  Schoenhals,  age 55,  has  served as  President  and Chief  Executive
Officer of the Company since  November 1990 and was elected  Chairman in October
1992.  Mr.  Schoenhals was elected to the Board of Directors of the Federal Home
Loan Bank of  Pittsburgh  in 1997,  and to the Board of Directors of  Brandywine
Fund,  Inc.,  Brandywine  Blue Fund,  Inc. and Brandywine  Advisors Fund, Inc in
1998.  He  is  also  a  volunteer  board  member  of  numerous   community-based
organizations.

Karl L. Johnston,  age 54, serves as Chief  Operating  Officer and Chief Lending
Officer.  Mr. Johnston joined the Bank in May 1997 as Chief Lending Officer.  He
was also appointed  Chief  Operating  Officer in 2001. Mr.  Johnston has over 32
years of banking  experience  in the Bank's local market area.  Prior to joining
the Bank,  Mr.  Johnston  spent his banking career at the Delaware Trust Company
where he was Executive Vice President and  Commercial  Banking Group  executive.
When  Delaware  Trust was merged  into  CoreStates  Bank,  he was a Senior  Vice
President responsible for middle market business  relationships for the State of
Delaware, Delaware County, Pennsylvania and northern Maryland and Virginia.


Mark A. Turner,  age 39,  serves as Chief  Operating  Officer,  Chief  Financial
Officer and Corporate  Secretary.  He has served as Chief Financial  Officer and
Corporate  Secretary  since  May 1998.  He was also  appointed  Chief  Operating
Officer  in 2001.  Mr.  Turner  joined  the  Company  in 1996 as  Managing  Vice
President and  Controller.  From 1994 to 1996 Mr.  Turner was Vice  President of
Finance for the Capital Markets Division of Meridian Bank, and Vice President of
Corporate Development for Meridian Bancorp, both in Reading, Pennsylvania. Prior
to  that,  he  was a  Senior  Audit  Manager  with  KPMG  LLP  in  Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.

                                       9





Deborah A. Powell,  age 46, has served as Executive  Vice President and Director
of Human Resources since May 2000. From November 1997 to May 2000, Ms Powell was
Vice  President of Human  Resources at Huffy Service  First,  a national  retail
services  company.  From November 1996 to October 1997, she was Human  Resources
Manager of The  Limited-Alliance  Data System,  a retail call center  operation.
From 1991 to 1996,  she was  National  Practice  Director of Midwest  Resources,
Inc., a Human Resources and Organizational Development consulting practice.

Audit Committee Report

In  accordance  with  rules  established  by the SEC,  the Audit  Committee  has
prepared the following report for inclusion in this proxy statement:

As part of its ongoing activities, the Audit Committee has:
o    Reviewed and discussed with management the Company's  audited  consolidated
     financial statements for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002;
o    Discussed  with  the  independent  auditors  the  matters  required  to  be
     discussed by Statement on Auditing  Standards No. 61,  Communications  with
     Audit Committees, as amended; and
o    Received  the  written  disclosures  and the  letter  from the  independent
     accountants  required  by  Independence  Standards  Board  Standard  No. 1,
     Independence Discussions with Audit Committees,  and has discussed with the
     independent accountants their independence.

Based on the review  and  discussions  referred  to above,  the Audit  Committee
recommended  to the Board of Directors that the audited  consolidated  financial
statements  be  included  in the  Company's  Annual  Report on Form 10-K for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 2002 for filing with the SEC.

The Audit Committee comprised of Messrs. Preston,  Julian, Downey and Weaver has
provided this report.

Personnel and Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation

Overview  and  Philosophy.   The  Personnel  Committee  oversees  the  Company's
executive  compensation  program.  The  Personnel  Committee's  responsibilities
include reviewing and making recommendations to the Board of Directors regarding
compensation  of the Chief  Executive  Officer and  reviewing  and approving the
compensation  paid to  other  executive  officers  of the  Company  (the  "Named
Executive  Officers")  listed in the "Summary  Compensation  Table" that follows
this report. The Committee also administers stock option and incentive plans and
administers compliance with Rule 16b-3 of the Exchange Act.

The objective of the compensation program is to establish levels of compensation
sufficient to attract and retain highly qualified and motivated executives.  The
program also seeks to align the interests of the Company's executive  management
with those of stockholders through the use of both incentive-based  compensation
for  specific  performance  based  criteria  and  stock-based  compensation  for
long-term stockholder value.

Compensation  Program Elements.  The Company's  executive  compensation  program
consists of base salaries, a short-term cash incentive plan, a stock option plan
and miscellaneous other fringe benefits.


                                       10


     Base Salary.  Base salary levels are determined by the Personnel  Committee
     with  reference  to corporate  and  individual  performance  in relation to
     strategic  goals  established  each  year,  competitive  market  trends and
     special  circumstances  particular  to the  Company's  staffing  needs.  In
     determining  base  salaries,  the  committee  refers to data  obtained from
     nationally  recognized  compensation  surveys as well as  information  from
     similar-sized banks and thrifts in the Mid-Atlantic region.

     Short-Term  Incentive  Plan.  The Board of Directors  approved a Management
     Incentive  Program (MIP) designed to reward the  accomplishment of specific
     corporate and  individual  performance  criteria.  For 2002,  the corporate
     performance criteria were: return on assets, return on equity and growth in
     earnings per share.  Plan  participants  include members of management from
     certain  vice  presidents  to the Chief  Executive  Officer.  Each year the
     Personnel Committee establishes a bonus pool based on the level and quality
     of the Company's earnings as compared to its plan.

     Individual awards are earned for successfully attaining objectives based on
     the  three  criteria  above,  and  in  completion  of  specific  individual
     performance  criteria.  Total awards accrued under the MIP during 2002 were
     approximately  $1,624,000  and were paid in cash during  2003.  This amount
     does not include  approximately  $1,032,000 of bonuses  earned in 2002, and
     paid in cash  during  2003 to  executives  at  Wilmington  Finance,  Inc, a
     majority-owned subsidiary of the Bank that was sold in January 2003.

     Stock Options. As a performance incentive, to encourage ownership of Common
     Stock and to further align the interests of  management  and  stockholders,
     the  Personnel  Committee  issues stock options under the 1997 Stock Option
     Plan. Under that Plan, the Personnel Committee issued 125,075 stock options
     in 2002.  The  Personnel  Committee  periodically  reviews and awards stock
     options to management  based on factors it deems  important;  however,  the
     Personnel Committee is not required to issue awards on an annual basis.

Compensation  of  the  Chief  Executive  Officer.  For  fiscal  year  2002,  Mr.
Schoenhals  earned $366,250 in base salary.  Mr.  Schoenhals  earned $449,400 in
bonus  for  fiscal  year 2002  under the MIP that was paid  after the end of the
fiscal year. In addition, Mr. Schoenhals earned a special bonus of $225,000 as a
result of the  extraordinary  performance  of the  Company  during  2002.  These
bonuses  reflect the Company's  achievement of specific  financial goals for the
2002  fiscal  year  as  well  as the  Personnel  Committee's  assessment  of Mr.
Schoenhals'  contribution to the achievement of those goals.  Factors considered
by the Personnel  Committee in assessing Mr. Schoenhals'  contribution  included
his  leadership  role  in  formulating  and  executing  the  Company's  business
strategy.  In addition to the foregoing cash  compensation,  Mr.  Schoenhals was
awarded  options to purchase  16,800 shares of Common Stock under the 1997 Stock
Option Plan representing  13.4% of the regular options granted to all Associates
during the year.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation.  The Company had no
"interlocking" relationships existing on or after December 31, 2002 in which (i)
any executive officer is a member of the Board of Directors of another financial
institution,  one of whose executive officers is a member of the Company's Board
of  directors,  or  where  (ii)  any  executive  officer  is  a  member  of  the
compensation  committee of another entity,  one of whose executive officers is a
member of the Company's  Board of Directors.  See  "Business  Relationships  and
Related Transactions" for information regarding other relationships such persons
may have with the Company.

Present  members of the Personnel  Committee are David E.  Hollowell,  Chairman,
Linda C.  Drake,  Claibourne  D.  Smith  and R. Ted  Weschler,  each of whom are
directors of the Company.

                                       11




COMPARATIVE STOCK PERFORMANCE GRAPH

The graph and table which follow show the cumulative  total return on the Common
Stock of the Company over the last five years compared with the cumulative total
return of the Dow Jones  Total  Market  Index and the Nasdaq Bank Index over the
same period as obtained  from  Bloomberg  L.P.  Cumulative  total  return on the
Common Stock or the index equals the total  increase in value since December 31,
1997,  assuming  reinvestment of all dividends paid into the Common Stock or the
index,  respectively.  The graph and table were prepared  assuming that $100 was
invested on December  31, 1997 in the Common Stock of the Company and in each of
the  indexes.  There  can  be no  assurance  that  the  Company's  future  stock
performance  will be the same or similar  to the  historical  stock  performance
shown in the graph below. The Company neither makes nor endorses any predictions
as to stock performance.


                       CUMULATIVE TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN
                  COMPARED WITH PERFORMANCE OF SELECTED INDEXES
                   December 31, 1997 through December 31, 2002


                               [GRAPHIC OMITTED]




                                            Cumulative Total Return
                                 ---------------------------------------------
                                   1997   1998   1999    2000    2001    2002
                                 ---------------------------------------------

WSFS Financial Corporation         $100   $ 85   $ 64    $ 66    $ 90    $172
Dow Jones Total Market Index        100    123    149     134     117      89
Nasdaq Bank Index                   100     90     85      99     112     119



                                       12



                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

The following  table sets forth  compensation  for the years ended  December 31,
2002,  2001 and 2000 for the  Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer and the three
other most highly compensated executive officers of the Company whose salary and
bonus earned in 2002 exceeded  $100,000  (herein referred to as "Named Executive
Officers").




                                                                      Long Term
                                                                    Compensation
                                                                        Awards
                                                                      Securities
Name and                                                              Underlying           All Other
Principal Position             Year     Salary        Bonus (1)      Options (2)      Compensation (3)
------------------             ----     ------        ---------      -----------      ----------------
                                                                         

Marvin N. Schoenhals           2002     $ 366,250    $674,400             16,800           $15,614
Chairman of the Board,         2001       322,500     175,000             26,300            11,900
President and Chief            2000       319,375        --              162,600            11,900
Executive Officer

Karl L. Johnston               2002       198,333     255,400             20,100            15,614
Chief Operating Officer        2001       184,583     100,000             42,800            11,900
and Chief Lending Officer      2000       169,167      15,000             18,900            11,900

Mark A. Turner                 2002       198,333     334,400             22,900            14,741
Chief Operating Officer,       2001       181,307     125,000             21,000            11,900
Chief Financial Officer        2000       155,399      21,000             56,000            11,900
and Secretary

Deborah A. Powell              2002       144,167      66,700              4,300            15,261
Executive Vice President,      2001       140,000      44,100              7,700             6,690
Director, Human Resources      2000        84,695      30,000             24,100              --



--------------------
(1)  For  2002,  includes  special  bonuses  paid in  December  2002 to  Messrs.
     Schoenhals,   Johnston  and  Turner   resulting   from  the   extraordinary
     performance of the Company. For each fiscal year, includes bonuses not paid
     until the following  fiscal year under the Company's  Management  Incentive
     Program.
(2)  Represents  stock options  granted  under the  Company's  1997 Stock Option
     Plan.
(3)  Represents contributions made by the Company to the individual's account in
     the Company's 401(k) Plan.


                                       13





OPTION GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

The following table contains  information  concerning the grant of stock options
under the Company's  1997 Stock Option Plan to the Chief  Executive  Officer and
each of the other Named Executive Officers during 2002.



                                                                                            Potential Realizable
                                                                                              Value at Assumed
                            Number of      % of Total                                       Annual Rates of Stock
                            Securities        Options                                        Price Appreciation
                            Underlying       Granted to                                      for Option Term (3)
                              Options      Associates in     Exercise     Expiration        ----------------------
Name                        Granted (1)     Fiscal Year      Price (2)       Date               5%          10%
----                        -----------    -------------     ---------    ----------         --------    ---------
                                                                                    

Marvin N. Schoenhals           16,800          13.4  %         $33.40       12/19/2012       $352,885    $ 894,281

Karl L. Johnston               10,000           8.0             17.35       02/29/2012        109,113      276,514
                               10,100           8.1             33.40       12/19/2012        212,151      537,633

Mark A. Turner                 10,000           8.0             17.35       02/29/2012        109,113      276,514
                               12,900          10.3             33.40       12/19/2012        270,966      686,680

Deborah A. Powell               4,300           3.4             33.40       12/19/2012         90,322      228,893



--------------------
(1)  Options vest and become  exercisable  at the rate of 20% per year beginning
     one year from grant date,  and expire ten years from the grant date. To the
     extent not already  exercisable,  the options generally become  immediately
     exercisable  in the event of a change in control of the Company,  generally
     defined as the  acquisition  of beneficial  ownership of 25% or more of the
     Company's voting securities by any person or group of persons.  The Company
     has  previously  adopted a program  permitting the award of a reload option
     that   allows  for  the   additional   grant  of  options   under   certain
     circumstances. If the grantee uses cash to exercise options within one year
     of the options becoming vested,  the optionee may, within the discretion of
     the Stock Option  Committee,  receive an  equivalent  number of  additional
     options (at the then current market price).  The original  shares  received
     upon  exercise  must be held for two years from the date of receipt for the
     reload  options  to  vest.  The  reload  options  also  vest in 20%  annual
     increments.  Reload  options will not be granted if no shares are available
     for issuance under the 1997 Stock Option Plan.

(2)  In each case,  the exercise or base price was no lower than the fair market
     value of the Common Stock on the date of grant.

(3)  The potential  realizable  dollar value of a grant  consists of the product
     of: (a) the  difference  between  (i) the  product of the per share  market
     price at the time of grant and the sum of 1 plus the  adjusted  stock price
     appreciation  rate (the assumed rate of  appreciation  compounded  annually
     over the term of the option) and (ii) the per share  exercise  price of the
     option;  and (b) the number of  securities  underlying  the grant at fiscal
     year-end.

                                       14



                   OPTION EXERCISES AND YEAR-END OPTION VALUE

The following table sets forth information concerning the exercise of options by
the Chief Executive  Officer and the other Named  Executive  Officers during the
last fiscal  year,  as well as the value of such options held by such persons at
the end of the fiscal year.


                                                            Value of Securities
                             Number of Securities        Underlying Unexercised
                            Underlying Unexercised        In-the Money Options
                          Options at Fiscal Year End     at Fiscal Year End (1)
                         ----------------------------   ---------------------------
Name                     Exercisable    Unexercisable   Exercisable   Unexercisable
----                     -----------    -------------   -----------   -------------
                                                          

Marvin N. Schoenhals        212,566         201,039      $4,006,562      $3,458,556
Karl L. Johnston             42,800          72,900         826,840       1,171,641
Mark A. Turner               53,948          84,052       1,051,086       1,362,413
Deborah A. Powell            11,180          24,920         236,845         417,253


--------------------
(1)  Based on the closing  price of $32.97 per share as reported  for the Common
     Stock on the Nasdaq  National Market on December 31, 2002 less the exercise
     price.  Options  are  considered  in-the-money  if the market  value of the
     underlying securities exceeds their exercise prices.

                                SEVERANCE POLICY

In 2001,  WSFS adopted a severance  policy that  provides  benefits to its Chief
Operating   Officers  and   Executive   Vice   Presidents   (collectively,   the
"Executives").  The policy  provides for payments in the event of being released
without cause or change of control.

Release  without cause - In the event an Executive is released  without cause, a
minimum of six months severance and one year of professional  level outplacement
will be offered. If the former Executive does not find new employment within six
months after  termination,  severance pay would continue for another six months,
or until the former Executive found  employment,  whichever occurs first. If the
former  Executive  finds  another  job at a lower  rate of pay  than  previously
received  at WSFS,  then WSFS  would  make up the  difference  until the  second
six-month  period ends.  Health  benefits  would  continue at the Associate rate
through the severance period.

Change in  control - Benefits  would be paid to an  Executive  released  without
cause within one year of change in control or if offered a position  that is not
within 35 miles of their current  work-site and at their current WSFS salary and
bonus  opportunity.  The Executive would receive 24 months base salary severance
offset  by the value  arising  from the  acceleration  of stock  option  vesting
triggered by the change in control.  The value of the accelerated  vesting would
account for no more than 12 months of the 24-month  minimum  commitment.  Twelve
months of executive level outplacement will be offered and health benefits would
continue at the Associate rate through the 24-month period.

In the event an  Executive  decides to leave WSFS after  being  offered the same
salary and bonus  opportunity  and the position is within 35 miles of their work
location,  then the value of the severance benefit will equal at least 12 months
base pay. If the value of the accelerated  vesting of stock options is less than
12  months  of base pay,  then  severance  pay will be added to the value of the
accelerated options to equal 12 months of base pay. No additional severance will
be paid if the value of  accelerated  options is greater  than,  or equal to, 12
months of base  pay.  Six  months of  professional  level  outplacement  will be
offered and health  benefits  would  continue at the Associate  rate through the
12-month period.


                                       15



Based on salary levels at December 31, 2002,  the maximum  benefit that would be
received by each Executive under the WSFS severance policy,  exclusive of health
benefit and executive  outplacement  costs,  would be as follows:  Mr.  Johnston
$400,000, Mr. Turner $400,000 and Ms Powell $288,000.

                 BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

During  2002,  Thomas P.  Preston was a partner with the law firm of Reed Smith,
LLP. The law firm  represented the Company and its affiliates in certain matters
during fiscal year 2002. In January 2003,  Mr. Preston became a partner with the
law firm of Blank Rome,  LLP. The Company  expects Mr.  Preston to continue such
representation in fiscal year 2003.

Certain  directors  and executive  officers of the Company and their  associates
were  customers of, and had  transactions  with, the Company and the Bank in the
ordinary course of business during fiscal year 2002. Similar transactions may be
expected to take place with the  Company  and the Bank in the future.  Loans and
commitments  included in such  transactions  were made on substantially the same
terms,  including interest rate and collateral,  as those prevailing at the time
for comparable transactions with other persons and did not involve more than the
normal risk of  collectibility,  nor did such loans  present  other  unfavorable
features to the  Company.  Loans and  commitments  to  directors  and  executive
officers of the Company by the Bank are subject to limitations and  restrictions
under Federal banking laws and  regulations  with which the Bank believes it has
complied in all material respects.

                                       16




      PROPOSAL 2 - RATIFICATION OF THE APPOINTMENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The  Board  of  Directors  of the  Company,  upon  recommendation  of the  Audit
Committee, has re-appointed,  subject to stockholder ratification,  KPMG LLP, as
independent  auditors of the Company for the year ending December 31, 2003. KPMG
LLP  has  served  as  the   Company's   independent   auditors   since  1994.  A
representative  of KPMG LLP is expected  to be present at the Annual  Meeting to
respond  to  appropriate  questions  and  will  have the  opportunity  to make a
statement if they desire to do so.

Principal Accounting Firm Fees

     Audit  Fees.  For the year  ended  December  31,  2002,  the  Company  paid
approximately  $387,000 to the  Company's  independent  auditor,  KPMG LLP,  for
professional  services  rendered  in  connection  with the  audit of the  annual
financial  statements and review of the quarterly  financial  statements.  These
fees also included the audit of the Company's subsidiaries,  Wilmington Finance,
Inc. and CustomerOne Financial Network (C1FN).

     Financial Information Systems Design. There were no fees billed by KPMG LLP
for professional services rendered for information  technology services relating
to financial  information  systems design and implementation for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 2002.

     Audit Related  Fees.  The fees billed by KPMG LLP for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2002 amounted to approximately  $32,000 for  professional  services
rendered  in  connection  with the  audit of  financial  statements  of  certain
Associate  benefit plans, the audit of C1FN's brokerage unit and the sale of the
Company's reverse mortgage portfolio.

     Tax Fees. Tax fees consisted of professional  services rendered by KPMG LLP
for the  fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  2002 for tax  consultation  and tax
compliance services. These fees amounted to approximately $191,000.

     All Other Fees. The aggregate fees billed by KPMG LLP for services rendered
to the Company,  other than the services  described  above,  for the fiscal year
ended  December 31, 2002,  were $39,000.  Such services  consisted of assistance
with the sale of C1FN.

     The Audit Committee has determined that the non-audit services performed by
its principal  accountants  during 2002 were  compatible  with  maintaining  the
principal accountants' independence.

     KPMG LLP has advised the Company that  neither the firm,  nor any member of
the firm, has any financial interest, direct or indirect, in any capacity in the
Company or its subsidiaries.


          The Board of Directors Recommends Voting "FOR" Proposal Two.


                                       17





         PROPOSAL 3 - APPROVAL OF AMENDMENTS TO THE 1997 STOCK OPTION PLAN

General

     Subject to approval of the Company's  stockholders,  the Board of Directors
of the  Company  proposes  to amend the WSFS  Financial  Corporation  1997 Stock
Option Plan (the "1997 Option Plan"). Specifically, the Board intends to:

     1.   Increase  the number of shares of Common  Stock  reserved for issuance
          thereunder  by  450,000  shares  from  1,165,000  shares to  1,615,000
          shares.  The Board of Directors is proposing the amendment in order to
          ensure  that  sufficient  shares are  available  for future  grants of
          options.

     2.   Limit new grants of  Company  stock  (either  in the form of  options,
          stock  appreciation  rights or phantom stock) to any one individual to
          50,000 shares annually.

     3.   Allow options issued prospectively to vest immediately upon retirement
          of a participant  subject to the following  conditions:  (i) Incentive
          stock options  (ISOs) must be exercised  within 90 days of retirement,
          (ii)  Non-qualified  options  (Non-ISOs) must be exercised  within one
          year of  retirement  (but not later  than the date on which the Option
          would  otherwise  expire),  and (iii) provided that  participant  must
          agree to not compete for a period of three years following the date on
          which the last option is exercised.

     The  following  is a summary of the proposed  amendments  to the 1997 Stock
Option Plan. The full text of the Amended and Restated 1997 Stock Option Plan is
attached to this Proxy Statement as Appendix A and  incorporated  herein by this
reference. Stockholders are urged to read Appendix A in its entirety.

Purpose of the 1997 Option Plan and the Amendments

     The  purpose of the 1997 Option  Plan is to advance  the  interests  of the
Company by providing  directors  and selected  Associates of the Company and its
affiliates, including the Bank, with the opportunity to acquire shares of Common
Stock. By encouraging such stock ownership, the Company seeks to attract, retain
and  motivate  the  best  available   personnel  for  positions  of  substantial
responsibility and to provide  additional  incentive to directors and Associates
of the Company and its  affiliates to promote the success of the business of the
Company.

     To ensure that the 1997 Option Plan  continues  to serve its  purpose,  the
Board of Directors  believes that it is imperative that the Company increase the
number of shares reserved for issuance thereunder by the 450,000 shares proposed
in the Amendment. As of the Record Date, awards to purchase a total of 1,095,550
shares of Common Stock have been granted under the 1997 Option Plan.  The shares
remaining in the plan would not be  sufficient  to allow the Company to continue
attract,  retain  and  provide  an  incentive  to high  quality  executives  and
directors by continuing to grant options at similar rates as in prior years. The
Board is also  recommending  that new grants of Company stock to any participant
be limited to 50,000 shares in any one calendar year.

     Previously, the Company amended the 1997 Option Plan to increase the number
of shares of Common Stock reserved for issuance  thereunder  from 625,000 shares
to 1,165,000  shares.  Such  amendment was approved by the  stockholders  of the
Company at their Annual Meeting in 2000.

     The proposed  amendment  also adds an annual limit of 50,000  shares to the
number of new  awards of  Options,  SARs or  Phantom  Stock any  individual  may
receive. If approved, this limitation will encourage a broader

                                       18




utilization of the additional  shares available for future awards under the 1997
Option Plan rather than such awards being  concentrated among a few individuals.
The proposed amendment,  if approved,  would also permit individuals who receive
option  awards  after  the  date of this  amendment,  and who  retire  from  the
employment  or service with the  Company,  to have any  unvested  awards  become
immediately  exercisable  and to have  additional time to exercise such Options,
provided that such  individuals  enter into an agreement not to compete with the
Company or its  subsidiaries  for a period of three years  following the date of
exercise of such Options.  In the event the proposed  amendment is not approved,
the increase in the number of shares  available  for grant under this Plan,  the
annual  limit on the grant of awards and the  acceleration  of vesting of awards
upon  retirement  provided  that  an  award  holder  enters  into a  non-compete
agreement, will not be effective.

Description of the 1997 Option Plan

     Effective Date. The 1997 Option Plan originally  became effective April 25,
1997,  the date of its approval by the Company's  stockholders  (the  "Effective
Date").  Awards made prior to the Effective Date were  contingent on stockholder
approval of the 1997 Option Plan.

     Administration.  The 1997 Option Plan is  administered  by a committee (the
"Committee"),  appointed by the Board of  Directors,  consisting of at least two
directors of the Company who are "non-employee  directors" within the meaning of
the federal  securities laws. The Personnel and  Compensation  Committee acts as
the Committee for purposes of administering  the 1997 Option Plan. The Committee
has  discretionary  authority  to  select  participants  and  grant  awards,  to
determine the form and content of any awards made under the 1997 Option Plan, to
interpret  the 1997 Option  Plan and to make any other  decisions  necessary  or
advisable in connection with  administering the 1997 Option Plan. All decisions,
determinations and  interpretations of the Committee are final and conclusive on
all persons  affected  thereby.  Members of the Committee are indemnified to the
full extent permissible under the Company's governing  instruments in connection
with any claims or other  actions  relating  to any action  taken under the 1997
Option  Plan.  Under the 1997 Option  Plan,  in the absence of a duly  appointed
Committee, the Board of Directors may act in lieu of the Committee.

     Eligible  Persons;  Types of Awards.  The 1997 Option Plan  authorizes  the
Committee to grant stock options ("Options"), stock appreciation rights ("SARs")
and phantom stock ("Phantom  Stock")(collectively,  "Awards") to such Associates
as the Committee  shall  designate,  although only  Associates  who are one of a
"select  group of  management  or highly  compensated  Associates"  (within  the
meaning of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, as amended) are eligible
to  receive  Phantom  Stock.  Only the  Board may make  Awards to  non-Associate
directors.  As of the Record  Date,  the  Company  and its  subsidiaries  had 57
Associates and 10  non-Associate  directors who  participated in the 1997 Option
Plan.

     Shares eligible for Grants.  If the proposed  amendments are approved,  the
1997 Option Plan will authorize the issuance of up to 1,615,000 shares of Common
Stock of which  1,095,550  shares will have  already  been  reserved for options
previously  granted.  Such shares may be (i) authorized by unissued shares, (ii)
shares held in treasury or (iii) shares held in a grantor trust. In the event of
a any merger, consolidation, recapitalization, reorganization, reclassification,
stock dividend,  split-up,  combination of shares, or similar event in which the
number of kind of shares is changed without receipt or payment of  consideration
by the Company, the Committee will adjust the number and kind of shares reserved
for issuance  under the 1997 Option Plan,  the number and kind of shares subject
to outstanding  Awards, and the exercise prices of such Awards.  Generally,  the
number of shares as to which SARs are granted are charged  against the aggregate
number of shares available for grant under the


                                       19




1997 Option Plan,  provided  that, in the case of an SAR granted in  conjunction
with an Option,  under circumstances in which the exercise of the SAR results in
termination  of the Option and vice  versa,  only the number of shares of Common
Stock  subject to the Option shall be charged  against the  aggregate  number of
shares of Common Stock remaining available under the 1997 Option Plan. If awards
should  expire,  become  unexercisable  or be forfeited  for any reason  without
having been exercised,  the shares of Common Stock subject to such Awards shall,
unless the 1997 Option Plan shall have been  terminated,  be  available  for the
grant of additional Awards under the 1997 Option Plan.

     Options.  Options may be either incentive stock options ("ISOs") as defined
in Section 422 of the  Internal  Revenue Code of 1986 (the  "Code"),  or options
that are not ISOs  ("Non-ISOs").  The exercise price as to any Option may not be
less than the fair market value  (determined  under the 1997 Option Plan) of the
optioned shares on the date of grant. In the case of a participant who owns more
than 10% of the outstanding Common Stock on the date of grant, such option price
may not be less than 110% of fair  market  value of the  shares.  As required by
federal tax laws, to the extent that the aggregate fair market value (determined
when an ISO is  granted)  of the  Common  Stock  with  respect to which ISOs are
exercisable by a participant  for the first time during any calendar year (under
all plans of the Company and of any subsidiary)  exceeds  $100,000,  the Options
granted in excess of $100,000  will be treated as Non-ISOs,  and not as ISOs. At
March 14,  2003,  the fair market value of the Common Stock was $32.65 per share
based on the closing price reported on the Nasdaq National Market.

     SARs.  An SAR may be  granted  in  tandem  with  all or part of any  Option
granted under the 1997 Option Plan, or without any  relationship  to any Option.
For SARs granted in tandem with Options,  the participant's  exercise of the SAR
may cancel his or her right to  exercise  the  Option,  and vice  versa.  An SAR
granted in tandem with an ISO in  circumstances in which the exercise of the SAR
affects the right to exercise the ISO, or vice versa,  must expire no later than
the ISO, must have the same exercise  price as the ISO and may be exercised only
when the ISO is exercisable and when the fair market value of the shares subject
to the ISO exceeds the exercise  price of the ISO.  Regardless of whether an SAR
is  granted in tandem  with an  Option,  exercise  of the SAR will  entitle  the
participant  to receive,  as the  Committee  prescribes  in the grant,  all or a
percentage of the difference  between (i) the fair market value of the shares of
Common Stock subject to the SAR at the time of its  exercise,  and (ii) the fair
market  value of such shares at the time the SAR was granted (or, in the case of
SARs granted in tandem with Options,  the exercise price). The exercise price as
to any particular SAR may not be less than the fair market value of the optioned
shares on the date of grant. At the record date there were no SARs outstanding.

     Exercise of Options and SARs.  The exercise of Options and SARs are subject
to such terms and  conditions as are  established  by the Committee in a written
agreement between the Committee and the 1997 Option Plan  participant,  provided
that each Option shall become  exercisable  no more rapidly than with respect to
20% of the underlying  shares on each of the five anniversary  dates of the date
on which  the Award  occurred.  Such  vesting  shall  accelerate  to 100% upon a
participant's termination of service as an Associate or director due to death or
disability  (as defined in the 1997  Option  Plan) or upon a "Change in Control"
(as such term is  defined  below) of the  Company  or the Bank.  See  "Change in
Control."  If the  proposed  amendments  are  approved,  100%  vesting will also
accelerate  for grants  made after the date of the 2003  Annual  Meeting,  under
certain circumstances, upon a participant's retirement from the Company.

     In the absence of Committee action to the contrary,  an otherwise unexpired
Option shall cease to be  exercisable  upon (i) a  participant's  termination of
employment for "just cause" (as defined in the 1997 Option Plan),  (ii) the date
30 days after a  participant  terminates  service  for a reason  other than just
cause,  death  or  disability  (iii)  the  date  one  year  after a  participant
terminates  service  due to  disability,  or (iv)  the date  two  years

                                       20




after a participant  terminates service due to death. If the proposed amendments
are approved, Options awarded toa retired participant after the date of the 2003
Annual meeting shall cease to be  exercisable  upon (i) in the case of ISOs, the
date 90 days after the date of retirement, and (ii) in the case of Non-ISOs, the
date one year after the date of  retirement,  but in no case later than the date
on which the Option would otherwise have expired.

     A participant may exercise  Options or SARs subject to provisions  relative
to their  termination  and  limitations on their  exercise,  only by (i) written
notice of intent to  exercise  the  Option or SAR with  respect  to a  specified
number  of  shares  of  Common   Stock,   and  (ii)   payment  to  the   Company
(contemporaneously  with delivery of such notice) in cash, in Common Stock owned
for more than six months or a  combination  of cash and Common  Stock  owned for
more than six  months,  of the  amount of the  exercise  price for the number of
shares with  respect to which the Option is then being  exercised.  Common Stock
owned  for more than six  months  utilized  in full or  partial  payment  of the
exercise  price for Options  shall be valued at its market  value at the date of
exercise.  An  election  to  exercise  an SAR may only be made during the period
beginning on the third  business day  following the release for  publication  of
quarterly or annual financial information and ending on the twelfth business day
following such date.

     Phantom Stock Awards.  The Committee may make Phantom Stock awards  through
credits of Common Stock to separate  accounts  established  for 1997 Option Plan
participants.  Any cash and stock  dividends  attributable to the phantom shares
will  also  be  credited  to  participant  accounts.  The  Committee  has  broad
discretion at the time of making a Phantom Stock award to impose conditions that
must be satisfied in order for the Phantom Stock to become  unrestricted  (i.e.,
vested or  non-forfeitable).  For example,  the Committee may condition  vesting
upon  continued  employment  or  upon  the  Company's  attainment  of  specified
performance  goals.  The  vesting  period  and  conditions  for  vesting  may be
different  for each  participant,  provided that a  participant's  Phantom Stock
award will  automatically  become 100% vested in the event of the  participant's
death or disability  prior to the  expiration  of the  restriction  period,  the
satisfaction of the restrictions applicable to an award of Phantom Stock or upon
a Change in Control of the  Company or the Bank.  See  "Change in  Control."  In
addition,  the  Committee  may  shorten  the  restriction  period  or waive  any
restrictions in the Committee  concludes that it is in the best interests of the
Company to do so.

     After a  participant  terminates  service as a director or as an Associate,
the  participant  will  receive  the vested  portion of his or her  account in a
lump-sum  cash  payment,  unless the  participant  elects,  more than six months
before  first  becoming  vested in any portion of the Phantom  Stock  award,  to
receive  all or part of his or her vested  account  (i) in  substantially  equal
annual  installments over a period of up to five years,  beginning with the year
in which the participant  terminates service,  and/or (ii) in unrestricted whole
shares  of  Common  Stock,  with cash  paid in lieu of  fractional  shares.  The
Committee  has  the  discretion  to make  payments  in  cash  regardless  of the
participant's  election.  At the record date there were no Phantom  Stock awards
outstanding.

     Conditions  on  Issuance of Shares.  The  Committee  has the  discretionary
authority to impose, in agreements,  such restrictions on shares of Common Stock
issued pursuant to the 1997 Option Plan as it may deem appropriate or desirable,
including but not limited to the authority to impose a right of first refusal or
to establish repurchase rights or both of these restrictions.  In addition,  the
Committee  may not issue shares  unless the issuance  complies  with  applicable
securities  laws, and, to that end, may require that a participant  make certain
representations or warranties.


                                       21



     If the  proposed  amendments  are  approved,  in any one  calendar  year, a
Participant  may not receive an award of more than 50,000  shares of the Company
Stock in the form of Options,  SARs,  Phantom Stock or any combination  thereof.

     Change in Control.  The provisions of any Award for its exercise or vesting
in installments  shall immediately and permanently lapse on the date of a Change
in Control.  Consequently,  all  Options,  SARs and Phantom  Stock  awards shall
become  immediately  exercisable  and fully  vested on the date of the Change in
Control.  For  purposes of the 1997 Option Plan a "Change in Control"  means any
one of the following events: (i) the acquisition of ownership,  holding or power
to vote more than 25% of the voting stock of the Bank or the  Company;  (ii) the
acquisition  of the ability to control the  election of a majority of the Bank's
or the Company's  directors;  (iii) the  acquisition of a controlling  influence
over the  management  or policies of the Bank or of the Company by any person or
by persons  acting as a "group"  (within  the  meaning  of Section  13(d) of the
Exchange Act); or (iv) during any period of two consecutive  years,  individuals
(the "Continuing  Directors") who at the beginning of such period constitute the
Board of Directors of the Bank or of the Company (the  "Existing  Board")  cease
for any reason to  constitute  at least  two-thirds  thereof,  provided that any
individual whose election or nomination for election as a member of the Existing
Board was approved by a vote of at least two-thirds of the Continuing  Directors
then in office shall be considered a Continuing  Director.  Notwithstanding  the
forgoing,  the Company's  ownership of the Bank shall not of itself constitute a
Change in Control for purposes of the Agreement.  For purposes of the definition
of Change in  Control  only,  the term  "person"  refers to an  individual  or a
corporation,  partnership,  trust, association,  joint venture, pool, syndicate,
sole proprietorship, unincorporated organization or any other form of entity.

     With  respect  to  Options,  at  the  time  of a  Change  in  Control,  the
participant  shall,  at the discretion of the Committee,  be entitled to receive
cash in an amount  equal to the  excess of the fair  market  value of the Common
Stock subject to such Option over the exercise price of such shares, in exchange
for  the  cancellation  of  such  Options  by the  participant.  Although  these
provisions  are included in the 1997 Option Plan primarily for the protection of
a participant in the event of a Change in Control of the Company,  they may also
be  regarded  as  having a  takeover  defensive  effect,  which may  reduce  the
Company's   vulnerability  to  hostile  takeover   attempts  and  certain  other
transactions  which have not been  negotiated  with and approved by the Board of
Directors.

     Nontransferability.  Participants  may  transfer  their  Awards  to  family
members or trusts under  specified  circumstances.  Awards may  otherwise not be
sold, pledged, assigned, hypothecated,  transferred or disposed of in any manner
other than by will or by the laws of descent and distribution.

     Effect of Dissolution and Related  Transactions.  In the event of a (i) the
liquidation  or dissolution of the Company,  (ii) a merger or  consolidation  in
which the Company is not the surviving  entity, or (iii) the sale or disposition
of all or substantially  all of the Company's assets (any of the foregoing to be
referred to herein as a "Transaction"),  all outstanding  Awards,  together with
the  exercise  prices  thereof,  will be  equitably  adjusted  for any change or
exchange of shares for a different  number or kind of shares which  results from
the Transaction.  However,  any such adjustment will be made in such a manner as
to not  constitute a  modification,  within the meaning of Section 424(h) of the
Code, of outstanding ISOs.

     Duration of the 1997  Option  Plan and  Grants.  The 1997 Option Plan has a
term of 10 years  from the  Effective  Date,  after  which date no Awards may be
granted.  The  maximum  term for an Award  is 10 years  from the date of  grant,
except  that the  maximum  term of an ISO (and an SAR  granted in tandem with an
ISO) may not  exceed  five  years if the  participant  owns more than 10% of the
Common Stock on the date of grant.  The

                                       22



expiration of the 1997 Option Plan, or its  termination by the  Committee,  will
not affect any Award then outstanding.

     Amendment,  Suspension or Termination of the 1997 Option Plan. The Board of
Directors  of the  Company  may from  time to time  amend  the terms of the 1997
Option Plan and,  with  respect to any shares at the time not subject to Awards,
suspend  or  terminate  the 1997  Option  Plan.  No  amendment,  suspension,  or
termination  of the 1997 Option Plan will,  without the consent of any  affected
participant,  alter  or  impair  any  rights  or  obligations  under  any  Award
previously  granted.   Stockholder  approval  will  not  be  required  for  plan
amendments  that would not  materially  increase the  benefits  accruing to plan
participants,  materially  increase the number of securities which may be issued
under  the  plan  or  materially  modify   eligibility   requirements  for  plan
participation.  The Board of  Directors  has  previously  amended the 1997 Stock
Option  Plan to  increase  the  number  of shares  reserved  for  issuance.  The
amendment was approved by the Company stockholders in 2000.

     Financial Effects of Awards. The Company receives no monetary consideration
for the granting of Awards  under the 1997 Option Plan.  It receives no monetary
consideration other than the exercise price for shares of Common Stock issued to
participants  upon  the  exercise  of the  Options,  and  receives  no  monetary
consideration  upon the exercise of SARs.  Under current  accounting  standards,
recognition of compensation  expense is not required when Options are granted at
an exercise  price  equal to or  exceeding  the fair market  value of the Common
Stock on the  date the  Option  is  granted  (although  footnote  disclosure  is
required).  Options may have a potentially dilutive impact on earnings per share
in future periods.

     The granting of SARs requires charges to the income of the Company based on
the amount of the appreciation,  if any, in the market price of the Common Stock
to which the SARs relate over the exercise price of those shares. If the average
market  price of the  Common  Stock  declines  subsequent  to a  charge  against
earnings due to estimated  appreciation in the Common Stock subject to SARs, the
amount of the decline will reverse such prior charges against  earnings (but not
by more than the aggregate of such prior charges).

     Neither the Company nor the Bank  receives any monetary  consideration  for
the granting of awards of Phantom  Stock.  Under current  accounting  standards,
when Phantom Stock awards are granted,  the Company must recognize  compensation
expense  based on the fair market  value of the  underlying  Common Stock on the
date the awards are granted,  with such amount being amortized over the expected
vesting period for the award.  The awarding of Phantom Stock requires charges to
the income of the Company  based on the amount of the  appreciation,  if any, in
the market price of the Common Stock to which the Phantom Stock relates over the
initial amounts credited to each  participant's  account.  If the average market
price of the Common Stock declines  subsequent to a charge against  earnings due
to estimated  appreciation  in the Common Stock,  the amount of the decline will
reverse such prior charges against  earnings (but not by more than the aggregate
of such prior charges).  If Phantom Stock awards are paid in Common Stock,  such
payment will have a dilutive impact on earnings.

     In that the stockholders of the Company do not have preemptive  rights,  to
the extent that the Company  settles awards under the 1997 Option Plan, in whole
or in part, with  authorized but unissued shares of Common Stock,  the interests
of current  stockholders may be diluted. If the proposed amendments are approved
and an  additional  450,000  shares are issued by the Company in the future upon
the exercise of options or settlement of SARs or Phantom Stock awards,  then the
dilutive effect to current  stockholders  would be approximately 5%. The Company
can  avoid  dilution  resulting  from  awards  under  the  1997  Option  Plan by
delivering shares  repurchased in the open market or settling such awards with a
cash payment.


                                       23



Federal Income Tax Consequences

     There are no tax  consequences  to  participants or the Company on the mere
granting of an Option, SAR or Phantom Stock award.  Subsequent  taxation depends
on the type of award and is highlighted below.

     ISOs. If the participant holds the shares purchased upon exercise of an ISO
for at least two years  from the date the ISO is  granted,  and for at least one
year from the date the ISO is  exercised,  any gain  realized on the sale of the
shares  received  upon  exercise of the ISO is taxed as long-term  capital gain.
However, the difference between the fair market value of the Common Stock on the
date of  exercise  and the  exercise  price  of the ISO will be  treated  by the
participant as an item of tax preference in the year of exercise for purposes of
the alternative minimum tax. If a participant  disposes of the shares before the
expiration  of  either of the two  special  holding  periods  noted  above,  the
disposition is a  "disqualifying  disposition."  In this event,  the participant
will be required,  at the time of the  disposition of the Common Stock, to treat
the lesser of the gain realized or the difference between the exercise price and
the fair  market  value of the Common  Stock at the date of exercise as ordinary
income and the excess, if any, as capital gain.

     The Company will not be entitled to any  deduction  for federal  income tax
purposes as the result of the grant or exercise of an ISO, regardless of whether
or not the  exercise  of the ISO results in  liability  to the  participant  for
alternative  minimum tax. However,  if a participant has ordinary income taxable
as compensation as a result of a disqualifying disposition,  the Company will be
entitled to deduct an equivalent amount.

     Non-ISOs. In the case of a Non-ISO, generally a  participant will recognize
ordinary  income  upon the  exercise  of the  Non-ISO in an amount  equal to the
difference  between the fair market  value of the shares on the date of exercise
and the option price. Upon a subsequent  disposition of such shares,  any amount
received by the  participant in excess of the fair market value of the shares as
of the exercise will be taxed as capital gain. The Company will be entitled to a
deduction  for  federal  income  tax  purposes  at the same time and in the same
amount as the ordinary  income  recognized by the participant in connection with
the exercise of a Non-ISO.

     SARs.  The  grant of an SAR has no tax  effect  on the  participant  or the
Company.  Upon exercise of the SARs, however,  any cash or Common Stock received
by the  participant in connection  with the surrender of the  participant's  SAR
will be treated as compensation income to the participant,  and the Company will
be  entitled  to a  business  expense  deduction  for  the  amounts  treated  as
compensation income.

     Phantom  Stock.  When cash or shares  are  transferred  to the  participant
pursuant to the vesting of a Phantom Stock award, the participant will recognize
ordinary  income  equal to the cash  received  and the fair market  value of the
shares  delivered under the Phantom Stock award. A participant may instead elect
to accelerate  recognition  of taxable  income  pursuant to Section 83(b) of the
Code.

Stock Option Grants

As of the Record Date,  1,095,550  Options had been granted pursuant to the 1997
Option Plan including  394,045,  115,700,  134,580 and 36,100 options granted to
Messrs.  Schoenhals,  Johnston,  Turner  and Ms  Powell,  respectively,  680,425
options granted to all executive officers as a group,  54,000 options granted to
all directors who are not executive  officers as a group and 361,125  granted to
all Associates who are not executive officers as a group.

                                       24






Equity Compensation Plan Information

     Set forth  below is  information  as of December  31, 2002 with  respect to
compensation   plans  under  which  equity  securities  of  the  Registrant  are
authorized for issuance.




                                                 (a)                        (b)                          (c)

                                                                                              Number of securities
                                       Number of Securities          Weighted-Average        remaining available for
                                         to be issued upon           exercise price of        future issuance under
                                      exercise of outstanding          outstanding          equity compensation plans
                                         Options, SARs and          Options, SARs and        (excluding securities
                                       Phantom Stock Awards        Phantom Stock Awards      reflected in Column (a)
                                      -----------------------      --------------------     --------------------------
                                                                                           

Equity compensation plans
  approved by stockholders (1)             1,080,060                     $ 14.55                       69,450

Equity compensation plans
 not approved by stockholders (2)                  -                           -                            -
                                           ---------                     -------                       ------

    TOTAL                                  1,080,060                     $ 14.55                       69,450
                                           =========                     =======                       ======


--------------------
(1)  Plans approved by  stockholders  include the 1986 Stock Option Plan and the
     1997 Stock Option Plan.
(2)  There are no equity  compensation  plans  that  have not been  approved  by
     stockholders.


Recommendation and Vote Required

     The Board of Directors  has  determined  that the proposed  amendments  are
necessary  to  maintain  the 1997 Option Plan as an  effective  incentive  plan.
Because the amendments will  materially  increase the number of shares of Common
Stock that may be issued under the 1997 Option  Plan,  the Board of Directors is
seeking stockholder approval of the amendments.

     Stockholder approval of the amendments to the 1997 Option Plan requires the
affirmative  vote of the holders of a majority of the votes  eligible to be cast
at the Annual Meeting.


   The Board of Directors recommends a vote "FOR" approval of Proposal Three.


                                       25





             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

Pursuant to  regulations  promulgated  under the  Exchange  Act,  the  Company's
officers  and  directors  and all  persons  who  beneficially  own more than ten
percent of the Common Stock  ("Reporting  Persons") are required to file reports
with the SEC  detailing  their  ownership and changes of ownership in the Common
Stock and to furnish the Company with copies of all such ownership  reports that
are filed.  Based solely on the Company's review of the copies of such ownership
reports  which it has  received in the past  fiscal year or with  respect to the
past fiscal year, or written  representations from the Reporting Persons that no
annual  report of changes in beneficial  ownership  were  required,  the Company
believes that during  fiscal year 2002 the Reporting  Persons have complied with
such reporting requirements.

                        ADVANCE NOTICE OF CERTAIN MATTERS
                      TO BE CONSIDERED AT AN ANNUAL MEETING

The bylaws of the  Company  provide  an advance  notice  procedure  for  certain
business,  or  nominations  to the Board of Directors,  to be brought before the
Annual Meeting. In order for a stockholder to properly bring business before the
Annual  Meeting  or to  propose  a  nominee  to  the  Board  of  Directors,  the
stockholder  must give written  notice to the  Secretary of the Company not less
than thirty days before the time  originally  fixed for such meeting;  provided,
however,  that in the event that less than forty  days'  notice or prior  public
disclosure of the date of the meeting is given or made to  stockholders,  notice
by the  stockholder  to be timely  must be  received  no later than the close of
business on the tenth day  following the day on which such notice of the date of
the Annual  Meeting was mailed or such public  disclosure  was made.  The notice
must include the stockholder's name and address as they appear on the records of
the Company,  number of shares  beneficially  owned by the stockholder,  a brief
description  of the  proposed  business,  the reasons for  bringing the business
before the Annual  Meeting and any material  interest of the  stockholder in the
proposed business. In the case of nominations to the Board of Directors, certain
information regarding the nominee must also be provided.

                  STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS FOR 2004 ANNUAL MEETING

It is anticipated that the proxy statement and form of proxy for the 2004 Annual
Meeting  of  Stockholders  will be  mailed  during  March of  2004.  Stockholder
proposals intended to be presented at the 2004 annual meeting of stockholders of
WSFS  Financial  Corporation  must be  received  by  November  21,  2003,  to be
considered  for inclusion in the proxy  statement and form of proxy  relating to
such meeting and should be addressed to the Secretary at the Company's principal
office.

                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

No matters other than those set forth in the Notice of Meeting accompanying this
Proxy Statement are expected to be presented to  stockholders  for action at the
Annual Meeting other than matters incident to the conduct of the Annual Meeting.
However,  if other matters are presented which are proper subjects for action by
stockholders,  and  which  may  properly  come  before  the  meeting,  it is the
intention  of  those  named in the  accompanying  proxy  to vote  such  proxy in
accordance with the  determination  of a majority of the Board of Directors upon
such matters.

                                       26



                                  MISCELLANEOUS

The expenses of the solicitation of the proxies, including the cost of preparing
and distributing  the Company's proxy materials,  the handling and tabulation of
proxies  received  and  charges  of  brokerage  houses  and other  institutions,
nominees or fiduciaries in forwarding such documents to beneficial owners,  will
be paid by the  Company.  In  addition  to the  mailing of the proxy  materials,
solicitation may be made in person or by telephone,  telegraph or other modes of
electronic  communication by the Company. The Company's directors and management
will receive no compensation  for their proxy  solicitation  services other than
their regular  salaries and overtime,  if applicable,  but may be reimbursed for
out-of-pocket expenses.

                     ANNUAL REPORT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The  Company's  Annual  Report for the  fiscal  year ended  December  31,  2002,
including  financial  statements  prepared in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles,  accompanies this Proxy Statement.  Such Annual Report is
not part of the Company's proxy materials. A copy of the Company's Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the Fiscal Year Ended  December 31, 2002 (without  exhibits) as
filed with the SEC will be furnished  without charge to  stockholders  as of the
Record  Date upon  written  request  to:  Investor  Relations  Department,  WSFS
Financial Corporation, 838 Market Street, Wilmington, Delaware, 19801.


                                       27



                                                                       EXHIBIT A


                           WSFS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                        AMENDED AND RESTATED - APRIL 2003
                             1997 STOCK OPTION PLAN

     1. Purpose of the Plan.

     The purpose of this Plan is to advance the interests of the Company through
providing  select key  Associates  and Directors of the Bank,  the Company,  and
their  Affiliates with the opportunity to acquire  Shares.  By encouraging  such
stock  ownership,  the Company  seeks to attract,  retain and  motivate the best
available  personnel for positions of substantial  responsibility and to provide
additional  incentives  to Directors  and key  Associates  of the Company or any
Affiliate to promote the success of the business.

     2. Definitions.

     As used herein, the following definitions shall apply:

     (a) "Account" shall mean a bookkeeping account maintained by the Company in
the name of a Participant who has received an Award of Phantom Stock.

     (b)  "Affiliate"  shall  mean  any  "parent   corporation"  or  "subsidiary
corporation"  of the Company,  as such terms are defined in Sections  424(e) and
(f), respectively, of the Code.

     (c) "Agreement"  shall mean a written  agreement entered into in accordance
with Paragraph 5(c).

     (d) "Associate" shall mean any person employed by the Company,  the Bank or
an Affiliate.

     (e) "Awards"  shall mean,  collectively,  Options,  SARs, and Phantom Stock
unless the context clearly indicates a different meaning.

     (f) "Bank" shall mean  Wilmington  Savings Fund  Society,  Federal  Savings
Bank.

     (g) "Board" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company.

     (h) "Change in Control" shall mean any one of the following events: (i) the
acquisition  of ownership,  holding or power to vote more than 25% of the voting
stock of the Bank or the Company; (ii) the acquisition of the ability to control
the election of a majority of the Bank's or the Company's  directors;  (iii) the
acquisition  of a controlling  influence  over the management or policies of the
Bank or of the Company by any person or by persons  acting as a "group"  (within
the meaning of Section 13(d) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934);  or (iv)
during  any  period  of two  consecutive  years,  individuals  (the  "Continuing
Directors")  who at the  beginning  of  such  period  constitute  the  Board  of
Directors of the Bank or of the Company  (the  "Existing  Board")  cease for any
reason to constitute at least two-thirds  thereof,  provided that any individual
whose  election or nomination for election as a member of the Existing Board was
approved by a vote of at least  two-thirds of the  Continuing  Directors then in
office shall be considered a Continuing Director. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
the Company's  ownership of the Bank shall not of itself  constitute a Change in
Control for purposes of the Agreement.  For purposes of this paragraph only, the
term "person" refers to an individual or a corporation, partnership, trust,

                                       A-1



association, joint venture, pool, syndicate, sole proprietorship, unincorporated
organization or any other form of entity not specifically listed herein.

     (i) "Code" shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

     (j) "Committee" shall mean either the Personnel and Compensation  Committee
                                ------
appointed by the Board in accordance  with Paragraph  5(a) hereof,  or the Board
                                                                    --
itself  (which  may  act,  at any time  and  from  time to time,  in lieu of the
Personnel and Compensation Committee).

     (k) "Common  Stock"  shall mean the common  stock,  $.01 par value,  of the
Company.

     (l)  "Company"  shall  mean WSFS  Financial  Corporation  or any  successor
thereto.

     (m)  "Continuous  Service"  shall mean the absence of any  interruption  or
termination  of  service  as an  Associate  or  Director  of the  Company  or an
Affiliate. Continuous Service shall not be considered interrupted in the case of
sick  leave,  military  leave or any  other  leave of  absence  approved  by the
Company,  in the case of transfers  between payroll  locations of the Company or
between the Company, an Affiliate or a successor, or in the case of a Director's
performance of services in an emeritus or advisory capacity.

     (n)  "Director"  shall mean any member of the Board,  and any member of the
board  of  directors  of any  Affiliate  that  the  Board  has,  by  resolution,
designated as being eligible for participation in this Plan.

     (o)  "Disability"  shall mean a physical or mental  condition which, in the
sole and absolute  discretion of the Committee,  is reasonably expected to be of
indefinite  duration and to substantially  prevent a Participant from fulfilling
his or her duties or responsibilities to the Company or an Affiliate.

     (p) "Effective Date" shall mean the date specified in Paragraph 15 hereof.

     (q)  "Exercise  Price" shall mean the price per Optioned  Share at which an
Option or SAR may be exercised.

     (r) "ISO" shall mean an option to purchase Common Stock which meets the
requirements set forth in the Plan, and which is intended to be and is
identified as an "incentive stock option" within the meaning of Section 422 of
the Code.

     (s) "Market Value" shall mean the fair market value of the Common Stock, as
determined under Paragraph 7(b) hereof.

     (t) "Non-Employee Director" shall have the meaning provided in Rule 16b-3.

     (u)  "Non-ISO"  means an option to  purchase  Common  Stock which meets the
requirements  set forth in the Plan but which is not  intended  to be and is not
identified as an ISO.

     (v) "Option" means an ISO and/or a Non-ISO.

     (w)  "Optioned  Shares"  shall  mean  Shares  subject  to an Award  granted
pursuant to this Plan.

                                       A-2


     (x)  "Participant"  shall mean any person who receives an Award pursuant to
the Plan.

     (y) "Phantom Stock" shall mean an Award pursuant to Paragraph 10 hereof.

     (z) "Plan"  shall mean the WSFS  Financial  Corporation  1997 Stock  Option
Plan.

     (aa)  "Rule  16b-3"  shall  mean  Rule  16b-3  of  the  General  Rules  and
Regulations under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.

     (bb) "Share" shall mean one share of Common Stock.

     (cc) "SAR" (or "Stock  Appreciation  Right")  means a right to receive  the
appreciation in value, or a portion of the appreciation in value, of a specified
number of shares of Common Stock.

     (dd) "Year of Service" shall mean a full twelve-month period, measured from
the date of an Award and each annual  anniversary  of that date,  during which a
Participant has not terminated Continuous Service for any reason.

     3. Term of the Plan and Awards.

     (a) Term of the Plan.  The Plan shall  continue in effect for a term of ten
years from the Effective Date, unless sooner terminated pursuant to Paragraph 17
hereof.  No Award  shall be  granted  under the Plan  after  ten years  from the
Effective Date.

     (b) Term of Awards.  The term of each Award granted under the Plan shall be
established  by the  Committee,  but shall not exceed ten (10) years;  provided,
however, that in the case of an Associate who owns Shares representing more than
10% of the outstanding  Common Stock at the time an ISO is granted,  the term of
such ISO shall not exceed five years.

     4. Shares Subject to the Plan.

     (a) General Rule.  Except as otherwise  required under Paragraph 12 hereof,
the aggregate number of Shares  deliverable  pursuant to Awards shall not exceed
1,615,000  Shares.  Such Shares may either be  authorized  or  unissued  Shares,
Shares  held in  treasury,  or Shares  held in a grantor  trust  created  by the
Company. If an Award should expire,  become  unexercisable,  or be forfeited for
any reason without having resulted in the issuance of Shares, the Shares subject
to the Awards shall,  unless the Plan has been terminated,  become available for
the grant of additional Awards under the Plan.

     (b) Special  Rule for SARs.  The number of Shares with  respect to which an
SAR is granted, but not the number of Shares which the Company delivers or could
deliver to an Associate or individual  upon exercise of an SAR, shall be charged
against  the  aggregate  number of Shares  remaining  available  under the Plan;
provided,  however,  that in the case of an SAR granted in  conjunction  with an
Option,  under  circumstances  in  which  the  exercise  of the SAR  results  in
termination  of the Option and vice versa,  only the number of Shares subject to
the Option shall be charged  against the  aggregate  number of Shares  remaining
available  under the Plan.  The Shares  involved in an Option as to which option
rights have  terminated  by reason of the exercise of a related SAR, as provided
in Paragraph 9 hereof,  shall not be available for the grant of further  Options
under the Plan.

                                       A-3



     5. Administration of the Plan.

     (a)  Composition of the Committee.  The Plan shall be  administered  by the
Committee, which shall consist of not less than two (2) members of the Board who
are Non-Employee Directors. Members of the Committee shall serve at the pleasure
of the Board. In the absence at any time of a duly appointed Committee, the Plan
shall be administered by the Board.

     (b) Powers of the Committee. Except as limited by the express provisions of
the Plan or by resolutions  adopted by the Board,  the Committee shall have sole
and complete  authority  and  discretion  (i) to select  Participants  and grant
Awards,  (ii) to  determine  the form and  content of Awards to be issued in the
form of  Agreements  under  the  Plan,  (iii) to  interpret  the  Plan,  (iv) to
prescribe, amend and rescind rules and regulations relating to the Plan, and (v)
to make other  determinations  necessary or advisable for the  administration of
the Plan.  The  committee  shall  have and may  exercise  such  other  power and
authority  as may be  delegated to it by the Board from time to time. A majority
of the entire  Committee shall  constitute a quorum and the action of a majority
of the  members  present at any  meeting at which a quorum is  present,  or acts
approved in writing by a majority of the Committee  without a meeting,  shall be
deemed the action of the Committee.

     (c)  Agreement.  Each  Award  shall be  evidenced  by a  written  agreement
containing  such  provisions  as may be  approved  by the  Committee.  Each such
Agreement  shall  constitute  a binding  contract  between  the  Company and the
Participant,  and every Participant,  upon acceptance of such Agreement shall be
bound by the terms and restrictions of the Plan and of such Agreement. The terms
of each such Agreement  shall be in accordance with the Plan, but each Agreement
may include  such  additional  provisions  and  restrictions  determined  by the
Committee,  in its  discretion,  provided that such  additional  provisions  and
restrictions are not inconsistent with the terms of the Plan. In particular, the
Committee  shall set forth in each Agreement (i) the Exercise Price of an Option
or SAR, (ii) the number of Shares subject to the Award, and its expiration date,
(iii) the  manner,  time,  and rate  (cumulative  or  otherwise)  of exercise or
vesting of such Award, and (iv) the restrictions, if any, to be placed upon such
Award,  or upon  Shares  which may be issued upon  exercise  of such Award.  The
Chairman of the  Committee  and such other  Directors  and  officers as shall be
designated  by the  Committee  are hereby  authorized  to execute  Agreements on
behalf of the Company and to cause them to be  delivered  to the  recipients  of
Awards.

     (d) Effect of the Committee's Decisions. All decisions,  determinations and
interpretations  of the Committee  shall be final and  conclusive on all persons
affected thereby.

     (e) Indemnification. In addition to such other rights of indemnification as
they may have, the members of the Committee  shall be indemnified by the Company
in connection with any claim,  action, suit or proceeding relating to any action
taken or  failure  to act  under or in  connection  with the Plan or any  Award,
granted hereunder to the full extent provided for under the Company's  governing
instruments with respect to the indemnification of Directors.

     6. Eligibility for Awards.

     (a) General Rule.  The Committee may make Awards only to key  Associates of
the  Company,  the Bank or an  Affiliate.  Only the  Board  may make  Awards  to
Non-Employee Directors.

     (b) Special Rule for Phantom Stock. A Phantom Stock Award shall be null and
void  retroactive  to its grant date if the recipient is an Associate who is not
one of a "select group of

                                       A-4



management or highly  compensated  employees" within the meaning of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act as amended.

     (c)  Limitation of Awards.  In any one calendar  year, an Associate may not
receive  new  awards of more than  50,000  shares of the  Company in the form of
options,  SARs or Phantom  Stock.  In the event  that the number of  outstanding
shares of stock of the company as of the date that this Amendment is approved by
the  Stockholders  of the Company ever  increases  due to a stock  split,  stock
dividend or other recapitalization, this 50,000 share annual limitation shall be
increased  in the  same  percentage  as the  percentage  increase  in the  total
outstanding  stock of the  Company  as a result of such  recapitalization.  This
Paragraph  (c)  shall  control  when the Board is  applying  the  provisions  of
Paragraph (d) of this Section 6.

     (d) Special Rules for ISOs. The aggregate  Market Value, as of the date the
Option is granted,  of the Shares with respect to which ISOs are exercisable for
the first time by an  Associate  during any calendar  year (under all  incentive
stock option plans, as defined in Section 422 of the Code, of the Company or any
present  or  future  Affiliate  of  the  Company)  shall  not  exceed  $100,000.
Notwithstanding the foregoing,  the Committee may grant Options in excess of the
foregoing  limitations,  in  which  case  Options  granted  in  excess  of  such
limitation shall be Non-ISOs.

     7. Exercise Price for Options.

     (a) Limits on Committee Discretion. The Exercise Price as to any particular
Option shall not be less than 100% of the Market Value of the Optioned Shares on
the date of grant. In the case of an Associate who owns Shares representing more
than 10% of the Company's  outstanding Shares of Common Stock at the time an ISO
is granted,  the Exercise  Price shall not be less than 110% of the Market Value
of the Optioned shares at the time an ISO is granted.

     (b) Standards for Determining Exercise Price. If the Common Stock is listed
on a national  securities exchange (including the Nasdaq National Market) on the
date in  question,  then the Market  Value per Share shall be the average of the
highest and lowest  selling  price on such  exchange on such date,  or, if there
were no sales on such date,  then the  Exercise  Price shall be the mean between
the bid and asked price on such date.  If the Common  Stock is traded  otherwise
than on a national securities exchange on the date in question,  then the Market
Value per Share shall be the mean  between the bid and asked price on such date,
or,  if there is no bid and asked  price on such  date,  then on the next  prior
business day on which there was a bid and asked price.  If no such bid and asked
price is  available,  then the Market  Value per Share  shall be its fair market
value as determined by the Committee, in its sole and absolute discretion.

     8. Exercise of Options.

     (a) Generally.  The Committee shall specify in each Agreement the period of
years over which the underlying Options shall become exercisable,  provided that
such vesting  shall occur no more  rapidly  than with respect to twenty  percent
(20%) of the Optioned Shares upon the  Participant's  completion of each of five
Years of Service.  Notwithstanding  the foregoing,  an Option shall become fully
(100%) exercisable immediately upon termination of the Participant's  Continuous
Service  due to  Disability,  death  or  retirement  as  defined  in  paragraphs
(f)(1)(a) and (b) of this Section 8.

     (b) Procedure for Exercise. A Participant may exercise Options,  subject to
provisions relative to its termination and limitations on its exercise,  only by
(1) written  notice of intent to exercise

                                       A-5


the Option with respect to a specified number of Shares,  and (2) payment to the
Company  (contemporaneously  with  delivery of such  notice) in cash,  in Common
Stock,  or a combination of cash and Common Stock, of the amount of the Exercise
Price for the  number of Shares  with  respect to which the Option is then being
exercised.  Each such notice (and payment where required) shall be delivered, or
mailed by prepaid registered or certified mail, addressed to the Chief Financial
Officer of the Company at its executive  offices.  Common Stock utilized in full
or partial  payment of the  Exercise  Price for  Options  shall be valued at its
Market Value at the date of exercise,  and may consist of Shares  subject to the
Option being exercised. An Option may not be exercised for a fractional Share.

     (c) Timing of Exercise.  Any election by a Participant to exercise  Options
shall be made during the period  beginning on the third  business day  following
the release for  publication of quarterly or annual  financial  information  and
ending on the 12th business day following  such date.  This  condition  shall be
deemed to be satisfied  when the specific  financial data is first made publicly
available.

     (d) Period of  Exercisability.  Except to the extent otherwise  provided in
the  terms  of this  Plan or an  Agreement,  an  Option  may be  exercised  by a
Participant only while he or she has maintained Continuous Service from the date
of the  grant  of the  Option,  or  within  30 days  after  termination  of such
Continuous  Service  (but not  later  than the date on which  the  Option  would
otherwise expire), except if the Participant's  Continuous Service terminates by
reason of -

          (1) "Just Cause" which for purposes  hereof shall have the meaning set
          forth in any unexpired  employment or severance  agreement between the
          Participant  and the Bank and/or the Company  (and,  in the absence of
          any  such   agreement,   shall   mean   termination   because  of  the
          Participant's personal dishonesty,  incompetence,  willful misconduct,
          breach  of  fiduciary  duty  involving  personal  profit,  intentional
          failure to perform stated duties,  willful  violation of any law, rule
          or regulation  (other than traffic  violations or similar offenses) or
          final  cease  and  desist  order),  then the  Participant's  rights to
          exercise such Option shall expire on the date of such termination;

          (2) Death,  then to the extent  that the  Participant  would have been
          entitled to exercise the Option upon his or her death,  such Option of
          the deceased  Participant  may be exercised  within two years from the
          date of his or her  death  (but not  later  than the date on which the
          Option would otherwise expire) by the personal  representatives of his
          or her estate or person or  persons  to whom his or her  rights  under
          such  Option  shall  have  passed  by will or by laws of  descent  and
          distribution;

          (3)  Disability,  then to the extent that the  Participant  would have
          been entitled to exercise the Option  immediately  prior to his or her
          Disability, such Option may be exercised within one year from the date
          of termination of employment due to Disability, but not later than the
          date on which the Option would otherwise expire;

          (4) Retirement,  then in accordance with paragraph (f) of this Section
          8.

     (e) Effect of the Committee's Decisions.  The Committee's  determination as
to whether a Participant's Continuous Service has ceased, and the effective date
thereof, shall be final and conclusive on all persons affected thereby.

     (f) Retirement.

     (1) If an Associate or Director  retires from the Company  possessing  ISOs
     and NQOs that were awarded after April 24, 2003 and that are not fully, one
     hundred percent (100%) vested at the

                                       A-6



     time of such retirement, the unvested options awarded after April 24, 2003,
     shall immediately become one hundred percent (100%) vested upon retirement.
     In addition,  such retiring  Associate or Director may exercise  those ISOs
     awarded  after  April 24,  2003 that became  fully  vested upon  retirement
     within  90  days of the  date of his  retirement  rather  than  the 30 days
     provided for in Section 8(d) above; and may exercise the NQOs awarded after
     April 24, 2003 that became fully vested upon retirement  within one year of
     the date of his retirement  rather than the 30 days provided for in Section
     8(d) above (but not later than the date on which the Option would otherwise
     expire). For purposes of paragraph 8(f) "retires" means

          (i) for an Associate of the Company,  to leave the  employment  of the
          Company after the Associate  completes  five years of employment  with
          the Company and attains age 55 under  circumstances  that would permit
          the Associate to continue to participate in the Company's group health
          plan  until the  Associate  attains  age 65 and  becomes  eligible  to
          participate in the Medicare  supplemental group health plan offered by
          the Company, as these plans now exist.

          (ii) for a member of the Board of Directors of the Company,  resigning
          as a director of the Company after the director has served as a member
          of the Board of  Directors  for a period  of at least six  consecutive
          years and has attained age 55.

     (2) As  consideration  for the  accelerated  vesting and extended  exercise
     period  of the  options  set  forth in  sub-paragraph  8(f)(1)  above,  the
     Associate  must agree in writing  that he or she will not compete  with the
     Company  anywhere  within the State of Delaware  and within an area that is
     fifty miles from the borders of the State of Delaware for a period of three
     years  following the date on which the Associate  exercises his or her last
     option.  In the event that the  Associate  breaches  the  agreement  to not
     compete with the Company,  the Associate shall pay as liquidated damages to
     the Company all income the  Associate has realized from the exercise of any
     options that would have  otherwise been forfeited but for the provisions of
     this Paragraph 8(f). For purpose of this Paragraph 8(f),  "compete with the
     Company" means to either directly or indirectly,  own, manage,  control, be
     employed  by,  participate  in,  or be  connected  in any  manner  with any
     business or entity which is a financial institution.

     9. SAR'S (Stock Appreciation Rights)

     (a) Granting of SARs. In its sole  discretion,  the Committee may from time
to time grant SARs either in conjunction  with, or independently of, any Options
granted under the Plan. An SAR granted in  conjunction  with an Option may be an
alternative  right wherein the exercise of the Option  terminates the SAR to the
extent of the number of Shares  purchased  upon the  exercise of the Option and,
correspondingly,  the exercise of the SAR terminates the Option to the extent of
the number of Shares with respect to which the SAR is exercised.  Alternatively,
an SAR granted in conjunction  with an Option may be an additional right wherein
both the SAR and the  Option  may be  exercised.  An SAR may not be  granted  in
conjunction  with an ISO under  circumstances  in which the  exercise of the SAR
affects  the right to  exercise  the ISO or vice  versa,  unless the SAR, by its
terms, meets all of the following requirements:

          (1)  The SAR will expire no later than the ISO;

          (2)  The  SAR may be for no  more  than  the  difference  between  the
               Exercise  Price of the ISO and the Market  Value per Share of the
               Shares subject to the ISO at the time the SAR is exercised;

                                       A-7



          (3)  The SAR is transferable  only when the ISO is  transferable,  and
               under the same conditions;

          (4)  The SAR may be exercised only when the ISO may be exercised; and

          (5)  The SAR may be exercised only when the Market Value of the Shares
               subject to the ISO exceeds the  aggregate  Exercise  Price of the
               Shares subject to the ISO.

     (b) Exercise  Price.  The Exercise Price as to any particular SAR shall not
be less than the Market  Value per Share of the  Optioned  Shares on the date of
grant.

     (c) Exercise of SARs. The provisions of Paragraph 8(c) hereof regarding the
period of exercisability  of Options are incorporated by reference  herein,  and
shall determine the period of  exercisability  of SARs. An SAR granted hereunder
shall be  exercisable  at such  times  and  under  such  conditions  as shall be
exercisable  at such times and under  such  conditions  as shall be  permissible
under  the  terms of the Plan and of the  Agreement  granted  to a  Participant,
provided that an SAR may not be exercised for a fractional  Share. Upon exercise
of an SAR, the Participant shall be entitled to receive,  without payment to the
Company except for applicable  withholding  taxes, an amount equal to the excess
of (or, in the  discretion  of the  Committee  if provided in the  Agreement,  a
portion of) the then  aggregate  Market  Value of the number of Optioned  Shares
with respect to which the  Participant  exercises  the SAR,  over the  aggregate
Exercise Price of such number of Optioned  Shares.  This amount shall be payable
by the Company, in the discretion of the Committee,  in cash or in Shares valued
at the then Market Value thereof, or any combination thereof.

     (d) Timing of Exercise.  Any  election by a  Participant  to exercise  SARs
shall be made during the period  beginning on the third  business day  following
the release for  publication of quarterly or annual  financial  information  and
ending on the 12th business day following  such date.  This  condition  shall be
deemed to be satisfied when the specified  financial data is first made publicly
available.

     (e) Procedure for Exercising SARs. To the extent not inconsistent herewith,
the  provisions  of Paragraph  8(b) hereof as to the  procedure  for  exercising
Options are  incorporated  by reference,  and shall  determine the procedure for
exercising SARs.

     10. Phantom Stock Awards.

     Any Phantom  Stock Awards that the  Committee may grant shall be subject to
the following  terms and  conditions,  and to such other terms and conditions as
are either applicable generally to Awards, or are prescribed by the Committee in
an Agreement with the Participant.

     (a) Awards Generally. With respect to each Phantom Stock Award, the Company
shall  establish  an Account in the  Participant's  name,  and shall credit that
Account  with the number of Shares  specified  in the  Agreement  effecting  the
Award.

     (b) Vesting Restrictions.  At any time, the Committee may at its discretion
impose a restriction  period for the Phantom Stock (the  "Restriction  Period").
The  Restriction  Period may differ among  Participants  and may have  different
expiration  dates with  respect to Shares  covered by the Award.  The  Committee
shall  determine  the  restrictions  applicable  to the award of Phantom  Stock,
including,  but  not  limited  to,  requirements  of  Continuous  Service  for a
specified  term,  or  the  attainment

                                       A-8



of specific corporate,  divisional or individual performance standards or goals,
which  restrictions may differ with respect to each  Participant.  The Agreement
shall  provide  for  forfeiture  of  Shares  covered  thereby  if the  specified
restrictions  are not met during the  Restriction  Period,  and may  provide for
early termination of any Restriction  Period in the event of satisfaction of the
specified restrictions prior to expiration of the Restriction Period.

     (c) Acceleration of Vesting.  Phantom Stock shall vest automatically to the
Participant  in the  event  of  his or her  death  or  Disability  prior  to the
expiration of the Restriction  Period or the  satisfaction  of the  restrictions
applicable to an award of Phantom Stock.  Notwithstanding the Restriction Period
and  the  restrictions  imposed  on  the  Phantom  Stock,  as set  forth  in any
Agreement,  the  Committee  may  shorten  the  Restriction  Period  or waive any
restrictions, if the Committee concludes that it is in the best interests of the
Company to do so.

     (d) Payment of Awards. Upon the expiration of the Restricted Period and the
full vesting of shares in a Participant's  account,  the Participant may receive
the fully vested  portion of his or her Account,  provided that the  Participant
has notified the Committee  six months prior to the date such  expiration of the
Restriction  Period and full  vesting  occur,  that the  Participant  intends to
withdraw the fully vested portion of his or her account.  The Company shall make
such payment in cash, and in a lump sum unless the Participant has elected, more
than six months before first becoming vested in any portion of the Phantom Stock
Award,  to  receive  all  or  part  of  his  or  her  vested  Account  - (i)  in
substantially  equal  annual  installments  over a period  of up to five  years,
beginning  with the year in which the  Participant's  Continuous  Service  ends,
and/or (ii) in unrestricted  whole Shares,  with cash paid in lieu of fractional
shares,  provided that the Committee  shall at all times have the  discretion to
make payments in cash regardless of the Participant's election.

     (e) Forfeiture of Stock. Each Agreement shall provide for forfeiture of any
Phantom  Stock  which  is  not  vested  in the  Participant  or  for  which  the
restrictions have not been satisfied during the Restriction Period.

     11. Change of Control.

     The  provisions of any Award which  provides for its exercise or vesting in
installments  shall immediately and permanently lapse on the date of a Change in
Control.  Consequently, all Options, SARs, and Phantom Stock Awards shall become
immediately  exercisable  and fully vested on the date of the Change in Control.
With  respect to Options,  at the time of a Change in Control,  the  Participant
shall,  at the  discretion of the  Committee,  be entitled to receive cash in an
amount equal to the excess of the Market  Value of the Common  Stock  subject to
such  Option  over  the  Exercise  Price of such  Shares,  in  exchange  for the
cancellation of such Options by the Participant.

     12. Effect of Changes in Common Stock Subject to the Plan.

     (a)  Recapitalizations:  Stock  Splits,  Etc. The number and kind of Shares
reserved for issuance  under the Plan, and the number and kind of shares subject
to outstanding Awards, and the Exercise Price thereof,  shall be proportionately
adjusted  for any  increase,  decrease,  change  or  exchange  of  Shares  for a
different  number or kind of shares or other  securities  of the  Company  which
results   from  a  merger   consolidation,   recapitalization,   reorganization,
reclassification,  stock  dividend,  split-up,  combination of shares or similar
event in which the number or kind of shares is changed  without  the  receipt or
payment of consideration by the Company.

                                       A-9



     (b) Transactions in which the Company is Not the Surviving  Entity.  In the
event of (i) the  liquidation or  dissolution  of the Company,  (ii) a merger or
consolidation  in which the Company is not the  surviving  entity,  or (iii) the
sale or disposition of all or substantially  all of the Company's assets (any of
the  foregoing  to be referred to herein as a  "Transaction"),  all  outstanding
Awards,  together with the Exercise Prices thereof,  shall be equitably adjusted
for any change or exchange of Shares for a different number or kind of shares or
other securities which results from the Transaction.

     (c) Special Rule for ISOs.  Any adjustment  made pursuant to  subparagraphs
(a) or  (b)(1)  hereof  shall be made in such a manner  as not to  constitute  a
modification,  within the meaning of Section  424(h) of the Code, of outstanding
ISOs.

     (d) Conditions and Restrictions on New, Additional,  or Different Shares or
Securities.  If, by reason of any adjustment made pursuant to this paragraph,  a
Participant becomes entitled to new, additional, or different shares of stock or
securities,  such new,  additional,  or different  shares of stock or securities
shall thereupon be subject to all of the conditions and restrictions  which were
applicable to the Shares pursuant to the Award before the adjustment was made.

     (e) Other Issuances. Except as expressly provided in this Paragraph 12, the
issuance by the Company or an Affiliate  of Shares of stock of any class,  or of
securities  convertible  into  Shares  or stock of  another  class,  for cash or
property or for labor or services  either upon direct sale or upon the  exercise
of  rights  or  warrants  to  subscribe  therefore,  shall  not  affect,  and no
adjustment shall be made with respect to, the number, class or Exercise Price of
Shares then subject to Awards or reserved for issuance under the Plan.

     (f) Certain  Special  Dividends.  The Exercise  Price of Shares  subject to
outstanding  Awards  shall be  proportionately  adjusted  upon the  payment of a
special  large  and  nonrecurring  dividend  that has the  effect of a return of
capital to the stockholders.

     13. Non-Transferability of Awards.

     Awards may not be sold,  pledged,  assigned,  hypothecated,  transferred or
disposed  of in any  manner  other  than by will or by the laws of  descent  and
distribution.  Notwithstanding  the  foregoing,  or any other  provision of this
Plan, a Participant  who holds Awards may transfer such Awards (but not ISOs) to
his  or  her  spouse,  lineal  ascendants,  lineal  descendants,  or  to a  duly
established trust for the benefit of one or more of these individuals. Awards so
transferred may thereafter be transferred only to the Participant who originally
received the grant or to an  individual or trust to whom the  Participant  could
have  initially  transferred  the Awards  pursuant to this  Paragraph 13. Awards
which are transferred  pursuant to this Paragraph 13 shall be exercisable by the
transferee  according  to the  same  terms  and  conditions  as  applied  to the
Participant.

     14. Time of Granting Awards.

     The date of grant of an Award shall, for all purposes, be the date on which
the Committee  makes the  determination  of granting  such Award.  Notice of the
determination  shall be given to each Participant to whom an Award is so granted
within a reasonable time after the date of such grant.

                                       A-10



     15. Effective Date.

     This Amended and Restated Plan shall become effective  immediately upon its
approval by a favorable vote of  stockholders  owning at least a majority of the
total  votes  eligible  to be cast at a duly  called  meeting  of the  Company's
stockholders  held in accordance with applicable  laws. Any Awards made prior to
approval of the Plan by the  stockholders  of the Company shall be contingent on
such approval.

     16.  Modification of Awards.

     At any time,  and from time to time,  the Board may authorize the Committee
to direct  execution of an  instrument  providing  for the  modification  of any
outstanding  Award,  provided no such modification shall confer on the holder of
said Award any right or benefit  which could not be  conferred  on him or her by
the grant of a new Award at such time,  or impair the Award  without the consent
of the holder of the Award.

     17. Amendment and Termination of the Plan.

     The  Board may from time to time  amend  the terms of the Plan,  and,  with
respect to any Shares at the time not  subject to Awards,  suspend or  terminate
the Plan. No amendment, suspension or termination of the Plan shall, without the
consent  of any  affected  holders  of an Award,  alter or impair  any rights or
obligations under any Award theretofore granted.

     18. Conditions Upon Issuance of Shares.

     (a) Compliance  with Securities  Laws.  Shares of Common Stock shall not be
issued with respect to any Award unless the issuance and delivery of such Shares
shall comply with all relevant provisions of law including,  without limitation,
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,  the rules and  regulations  promulgated
thereunder,  any applicable  state  securities law, and the  requirements of any
stock exchange upon which the Shares may then be listed.

     (b) Special Circumstances.  The inability of the Company to obtain approval
from any  regulatory  body or authority  deemed by the  Company's  counsel to be
necessary to the lawful issuance and sale of any Shares  hereunder shall relieve
the  Company of any  liability  in respect of the  non-issuance  or sale of such
Shares.  As a condition  to the  exercise  of an Option or SAR,  the Company may
require the person exercising the Option or SAR to make such representations and
warranties as may be necessary to assure the  availability  of an exemption from
the registration requirements of federal or state securities law.

     (c)  Committee  Discretion.  The  Committee  shall  have the  discretionary
authority to impose in  Agreements  such  restrictions  on Shares as it may deem
appropriate or desirable, including but not limited to the authority to impose a
right  of first  refusal  or to  establish  repurchase  rights  or both of these
restrictions.

     19. Reservation of Shares.

     The Company, during the term of the Plan, will reserve and keep available a
number of Shares sufficient to satisfy the requirements of the Plan.

                                       A-11



     20. Withholding Tax.

     The Company's  obligation to deliver cash or Shares upon vesting of Phantom
Stock  or  upon  exercise  of  Options  and/or  SARs  shall  be  subject  to the
Participant's satisfaction of all applicable federal, state and local income and
employment  tax  withholding  obligations.  Each  Participant  may  satisfy  the
obligation,  in whole or in part,  by  irrevocably  electing to have the Company
withhold  Shares,  or to deliver to the  Company  Shares  that he or she already
owns,  having a value equal to the amount required to be withheld.  The value of
the Shares to be withheld,  or  delivered to the Company,  shall be based on the
Market Value of the Shares on the date the amount of tax to be withheld is to be
determined. As an alternative, the Company may retain, or sell without notice, a
number of such Shares sufficient to cover the amount required to be withheld.

     21. No Employment or Other Rights.

     In no event shall an Associate's  or Director's  eligibility to participate
or  participation  in the Plan  create  or be  deemed  to  create  any  legal or
equitable  right of the  Associate,  Director,  or any other  party to  continue
service with the Company, the Bank or any Affiliate of such corporations. Except
to the extent  provided in  Paragraphs  6(b) and 9(a)  hereof,  no  Associate or
Director shall have a right to be granted an Award or, having received an Award,
the right to again be granted an Award.  However,  an  Associate or Director who
has been granted an Award may, if otherwise  eligible,  be granted an additional
Award or Awards.

     22. Nonexclusivity of the Plan.

     Neither  the  adoption of the Plan by the Board nor the  submission  of the
Plan to the  stockholders  of the Company for  approval  shall be  construed  as
creating any limitations on the power of the Board to adopt such other incentive
arrangements  as it may  deem  desirable,  including,  without  limitation,  the
granting of stock options  otherwise than under this Plan, and such arrangements
may be either applicable generally or only in specific cases.

     23. Governing Law.

     The Plan shall be governed by and construed in accordance  with the laws of
the State of Delaware,  except to the extent that federal law shall be deemed to
apply.



                                      A-12


           This Proxy is Solicited on Behalf of the Board of Directors

                           WSFS FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                                     for the
                       2003 Annual Meeting of Stockholders

         The  undersigned  hereby  appoints  Marvin  N.  Schoenhals  and Mark A.
Turner, or either of them, with full power of substitution,  to act as attorneys
and proxies for the  undersigned  and to vote all shares of Common Stock of WSFS
Financial Corporation,  which the undersigned is entitled to vote, at the Annual
Meeting of  Stockholders  to be held on April 24,  2003 at 4:00 p.m.,  or at any
adjournments thereof, as follows:

The Board of  Directors  recommends  a vote FOR all  nominees  and items  listed
below.

1.   Election of
     Directors

                                 WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
     FOR ALL NOMINEES             FOR ALL NOMINEES            FOR ALL EXCEPT

           [ ]                          [ ]                        [ ]

     Nominees:

     Linda C. Drake
     David E. Hollowell
     Claibourne D. Smith
     Eugene W. Weaver

     Each for a three year term
     expiring 2006

     Instruction:  To  withhold authority to vote any individual nominee(s) mark
     "FOR ALL EXCEPT" and write the  nominee's  name you wish to withhold on the
     line provided below.

---------------------------------------

2.   Ratification  of the  appointment of KPMG, LLP as independent  auditors for
     the fiscal year ending December 31, 2003.

                                FOR    AGAINST      ABSTAIN

                                [ ]      [ ]         [ ]

3.   Approval of amendments to the 1997 Stock Option Plan

                                FOR    AGAINST      ABSTAIN

                                [ ]      [ ]         [ ]

     The proxy is revocable  and,  when  properly  executed will be voted in the
     manner directed hereby by the undersigned.  If no directions are made, this
     signed  proxy  will be  voted  FOR  each  of the  nominees  and  the  other
     proposals. The undersigned, by executing and delivering this proxy, revokes
     the authority  given with respect to any earlier  dated proxy  submitted by
     the undersigned.

     Unless  contrary  direction  is given,  the right is  reserved  in the sole
     discretion of the Board of Directors to distribute  votes among some or all
     of the above  nominees  in a manner  other  than  equally so as to elect as
     directors the maximum possible number of such nominees.

     In their  discretion  the  proxies are  authorized  to vote upon such other
     business as may properly come before the Annual Meeting.


     The  undersigned  acknowledges  receipt of the Notice of Annual  Meeting of
     Stockholders,  a Proxy  Statement  dated March 21, 2003 and the 2002 Annual
     Report of WSFS Financial Corporation.

                  Please  sign  exactly as name  appears  hereon.  If signing as
                  attorney, executor, administrator, trustee or guardian, please
                  indicate  the  capacity  in  which  you  are  acting.  Proxies
                  executed by corporations should be signed by a duly authorized
                  officer.


SIGNATURE(S)                                      Date
            -------------------------                   ------------------



                          PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND RETURN
                      PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.