Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hike & Bike Trail; Hoodlebug Trail; Hoover-Mason Trestle; Houtzdale Line Trail; Huntingdon and Broad Top Trail; I. Indian Creek Valley Trail; Ironton Rail-trail; J. James Mayer Riverwalk; JFK Walking Trail; John B. Bartram Trail; K. Kellettville To Nebraska Trail; Knox & Kane Rail Trail [3] L. Lancaster Junction Trail; Lebanon Valley Rail Trail ...
PA 291: Intersection of Passyunk and Oregon Avenues just south of interchange with Schuylkill Expressway [48] Allegheny Mountain Tunnel: Somerset County: I-70 / I-76 (Pennsylvania Turnpike) Eastern Continental Divide: 6,070 feet (1,850 m) 1939, 1965 [49] Armstrong Tunnel: Pittsburgh: Motor Vehicles Duquesne University: 1,320 feet (400 m) 1927 ...
The Gallitzin Tunnels in Gallitzin, Pennsylvania, are a set of three adjacent tunnels through the Allegheny Mountains in western Pennsylvania. They were completed in 1854, 1855, and 1902 by the Pennsylvania Railroad as part of the cross-state route that includes the nearby Horseshoe Curve to the east.
Railroad Grade Road, a five-mile long paved road/trail; a former section of the old East Tennessee and Western North Carolina line west of Roan Mountain Shelby Farms Greenline , a 6.6 mile trail using the previous CSX Rail right-of-way in Shelby County ; an additional 7 miles are planned.
The Ghost Town Trail is a rail trail in Western Pennsylvania that runs 36 miles (58 km) between Black Lick, Indiana County, and Ebensburg, Cambria County. [1] Established in 1991 on the right-of-way of the former Ebensburg and Black Lick Railroad, the trail follows the Blacklick Creek and passes through many ghost towns that were abandoned in the early 1900s with the decline of the local coal ...
BicyclePA Route Z along Pennsylvania Route 5 in Erie County, which is also part of the Seaway Trail, Lake Erie Circle Tour, and U.S. Bicycle Route 30. In the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, BicyclePA bicycle routes are a series of bicycle routes created in the 2000s to cross the state on highways and rail trails.
Josiah White and Erskine Hazard-founding partners of the Summit Hill & Mauch Chunk Railroad Pisgah Mountain and the topography of the Summit Hill and Mauch Chunk Railroad. The Mauch Chunk Switchback Railway, also known as the Mauch Chunk and Summit Railroad and occasionally shortened to Mauch Chunk Railway, was a coal-hauling railroad in the mountains of Pennsylvania that was built in 1827 and ...
The mountain and tunnel are named for John Savage, an early surveyor who narrowly avoided becoming a victim of cannibalism in the area in 1736.While he was surveying the land in the wintertime, the circumstances became dire and he offered himself up as food, but the rest of the survey party declined.