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File:South Fork, PA (1), Aug. 2024.jpg. ... English: Photo of northbound Main Street in South Fork, Pennsylvania. Photo taken looking northwest from Lake Street.
The Johnstown Flood National Memorial is a unit of the United States National Park Service. [2] [3] Established in 1964 [4] through legislation signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson, [5] [6] it pays tribute to the thousands of victims of the Johnstown Flood, who were injured or killed on May 31, 1889 when the South Fork Dam ruptured.
Lincoln Cemetery, Chambersburg; Lincoln Cemetery (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) Lobb's Cemetery and Yohogania County Courthouse Site, West Elizabeth; Magnolia Cemetery, Philadelphia; Mikveh Israel Cemetery, Philadelphia, oldest Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia; founded 1738; Mikveh Israel Cemetery (11th and Federal) Monongahela Cemetery, Monongahela
Remains of the South Fork Dam abutment with US-219 downstream in the background as it appeared in 1980 Remains of South Fork Dam showing construction details of the dam as it appeared in 1980 High above the city, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania built the South Fork Dam between 1838 and 1853 as part of a cross-state canal system, the Main Line ...
South Fork is located in south-central Cambria County at (40.365042, -78.790474), [6] in the valley of the Little Conemaugh River at the confluence of its South U.S. Route 219, a four-lane expressway, passes just east of the borough and leads 10 miles (16 km) north to Ebensburg, the Cambria County seat.
Homewood Cemetery is a historic urban cemetery [1] in Pittsburgh, ... Henry Clay Frick (1849–1919), industrialist, founder of the South Fork Fishing and Hunting Club;
Feb. 13—SOUTH FORK, Pa. — Retired naval fighter pilot Mark Kohart moved back home to South Fork with intentions to "retire, retire," he said. But he's served as South Fork Borough Council ...
St. Michael is located in southeastern Cambria County in the valley of the South Fork of the Little Conemaugh River, less than a mile southeast of U.S. Route 219, a four-lane highway which leads 12 miles (19 km) north to Ebensburg, the county seat, and 11 miles (18 km) southwest (via Pennsylvania Route 56) to Johnstown.