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19363. Area codes: 610 and 484: FIPS code: 42-57480: Website: www.oxfordboro.org: Oxford is a borough in Chester ... The business district on Third Street was ...
19363. Area code(s) 610, 484: FIPS code: 42-33248: GNIS feature ID: 1203763: Hayesville is a populated place located within Lower Oxford Township in Chester County ...
According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 9.7 square miles (25.2 km 2), of which 9.5 square miles (24.6 km 2) is land and 0.23 square miles (0.6 km 2), or 2.55%, is water. [3] The township is in eastern Adams County and surrounds the borough of New Oxford.
Notable non-residential buildings include the Oxford Hall, Octoraro Hotel, Oxford Station (Borough Hall), Dickey Building, Masonic Building, Fulton Bank Building (1925), Gibson's Store (c. 1832), Orthodox Friends Meeting House, Methodist Church (1885), United Presbyterian Church (1893), and the Oxford Grain & Hay Company granary (1880).
PA 611 (Broad Street) Access via Cayuga/St. Lukes Streets: 55.037: 88.573: US 13 south (Hunting Park Avenue) / Broad Street : Southern end of US 13 concurrency; southbound exit and northbound entrance: 55.407: 89.169: Northern end of freeway section: 58.600– 58.670: 94.308– 94.420: PA 232 north (Oxford Avenue) / Cheltenham Avenue
PA 10 begins (North Third Street) Southern terminus of PA 10; south end of PA 10 overlap: 7.766: 12.498: PA 10 north (North Third Street) – Cochranville: North end of PA 10 overlap: 8.708: 14.014: US 1 (Kennett–Oxford Bypass) – Kennett Square, Rising Sun: Interchange: Lancaster: Quarryville: 20.842: 33.542: PA 372 (East State Street) to ...
As of 2022, there were 60.41 miles (97.22 km) of public roads in Lower Oxford Township, of which 23.90 miles (38.46 km) were maintained by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) and 36.51 miles (58.76 km) were maintained by the township. [13] U.S. Route 1 is the most prominent highway serving Lower Oxford Township. It follows ...
PA 896 southbound in London Britain Township. When Pennsylvania first legislated routes in 1911, what is now PA 896 was not legislated as part of a route. [7] PA 896 was first designated in 1928 to run from PA 42 (now PA 10) in Russellville northwest to the Octoraro Creek in Homeville along an unpaved road.