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Slippery Rock Township is a township in Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, United States. As of the 2020 census , [ 5 ] the population was 2,913, a decline from the figure of 3,283 tabulated in 2010. [ 6 ]
The unincorporated community of Doughertys Mills is in the southern part of the township, along Slippery Rock Creek, and Branchton is near the township's eastern border. According to the United States Census Bureau , the township has a total area of 25.7 square miles (66.5 km 2 ), of which 0.02 square miles (0.04 km 2 ), or 0.06%, is water.
Slippery Rock is a borough in Butler County, Pennsylvania.The population was 3,081 at the 2020 census. [4] Slippery Rock is included in the Greater Pittsburgh Region.The area is home to Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania, partially in the borough limits, [5] and attended by nearly 9,000 students as a member of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
Slippery Rock may refer to the following: Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania, a borough in Butler County; Slippery Rock Creek, a tributary of the Beaver River in Pennsylvania; Slippery Rock University, Pennsylvania, a census-designated place; Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania; Slippery Rock Township, Butler County, Pennsylvania
In 2009, the district residents’ per capita income was $17,192, while the median family income was $46,306. [3] In the Commonwealth, the median family income was $49,501 [4] and the United States median family income was $49,445, in 2010. [5] Laurel School District operates one elementary school and a combined junior–senior high school.
There's a team of maybe 100 personnel inside Raven Rock right now, ready to pick up the pieces of the U.S. government," Graff said. (This story has been refiled to remove an incorrect picture)
"Slippery Rock State College" was established in 1960 and issued undergraduate and graduate degrees within the liberal arts and other professions. [8] From 1960 to 1971, enrollment rose from 1,314 to 6,020 students, before eclipsing 7,000 in 1988 and 8,000 in 2005.
In the 1980s and ’90s, gentrification priced Black residents out of the area, and many moved farther inland. Many of those who could afford to remain lived in large family homes passed down ...