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Location of Lebanon County in Pennsylvania. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, United States.
At church on Green Point School Rd., N of Pa. 443 near Murray 40°29′55″N 76°32′17″W / 40.49862°N 76.53813°W / 40.49862; -76.53813 ( Sattazahn Lutheran Roadside
Church of England: North Cornwall Cluster St Peter, Port Isaac St Endellion [186] Peter: 1882-1884 Church of England: North Cornwall Cluster Trelights Methodist Church St Endellion [143] Methodist: Bodmin, Padstow, Wadebridge Circ St James the Great, St Kew St Kew [186] James: Medieval Church of England: North Cornwall Cluster
North Cornwall Township is a township in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population of North Cornwall Township was 8,511 as of the 2020 census . [ 2 ] It is part of the Lebanon, PA Metropolitan Statistical Area .
According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 0.4 square mile (1.1 km 2), all land.It is bordered to the east and north by the city of Lebanon, to the west by North Lebanon Township, and to the south by North Cornwall Township.
Cornwall was initially settled by Peter Grubb in 1734. [4] Peter was a Chester County stonemason who came to, what was then Lancaster County , in search of high quality stone for quarrying . First building his house and then a store, he discovered magnetite iron ore nearby and decided to test its quality, he found the ore to be exceedingly pure.
St Nonna's Church, also known as the Cathedral of the Moors, is the second largest church on Bodmin Moor, Cornwall, located in the village of Altarnun (meaning: "altar of Nonn"). [1] The dedication is to Saint Non or Nonna, who was the mother of St David . [ 2 ]
Pursuant to a letter written by Hugh Maxwell, an official of the Cornwall and Lebanon Railroad, and sent by him to the Lebanon County Historical Society "and read before them on April 26, 1901" the name "Mount Gretna" was suggested by his wife, subsequently adopted by the board, and "On September 21st 1883 that name appears in public print for the first time in the Lebanon Daily News."