Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wilkinsburg is a borough, located in the U.S. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; which means that Wilkinsburg is a self-governing municipal entity, of the sort often thought of as a town. Wilkinsburg Borough is organized into three wards: First, Second, and Third. Overall oversight of Wilkinsburg Borough is by the borough council.
On March 1, 2000, a racially motivated shooting spree occurred in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, when 39-year-old Ronald Taylor, a black man who embraced anti-white and anti-semitic ideologies, shot and killed three white men and wounded two others within an eight block radius, primarily at local Burger King and McDonald's restaurants. [2]
A woman woke up in her Pennsylvania home to a man wearing all black, including a full-face mask and gloves, standing over her, according to multiple reports citing police. Wilkinsburg police spoke ...
On March 9, 2016, six people were killed and three others injured in a mass shooting at a suburban house in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, United States, near Pittsburgh.One of the victims was a pregnant woman, whose unborn baby was added to the number of fatalities on the day after the shooting.
Wilkins Township is a township in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States.The population was 6,357 at the 2010 census. [3] It is served by Pennsylvania's 12th congressional district, the 43rd District of the Pennsylvania State Senate, and the 34th District of the Pennsylvania State House of Representatives.
Pennsylvania's 18th congressional district was a district including the city of Pittsburgh and parts of surrounding suburbs. A variety of working class and majority black suburbs located to the east of the city were included, such as McKeesport and Wilkinsburg .
Two officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 faced boos and walkouts by Republicans at the Pennsylvania state House as they visited the chamber, according to several lawmakers present.
Hamnett Historic District is a historic district in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. Bordered roughly by Rebecca Avenue, the rear property lines on the east side of Center Street, Sewer Way, and Lytle Way, it encompasses 77 buildings and 114 acres. [2] This district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on June 28, 2010. [1]