Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of State Routes in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. State Routes in Pennsylvania are maintained by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation.This list incorporates routes numbered between 0001 and 4999 which are either Traffic Routes (Interstate, US, or PA Routes numbered 0001 through 0999) or Quadrant Routes (State Routes numbered 1001 through 4999).
Roughly bounded by Edgewood Avenue, the Windsor Township line, a Maryland and Pennsylvania line, Chestnut Road, Country Club Road, and the York Township line 39°53′55″N 76°36′35″W / 39.898611°N 76.609722°W / 39.898611; -76.609722 ( Red Lion Borough Historic
First a log cabin, it was rebuilt in 1725 using red brick and offered respite to drovers until 1888. While men slept in the house, cattle bedded down in lots next to the inn. Red Lyon also became the village name until 1826 when the post office opened; however, since several towns named Red Lyon had already been established in Pennsylvania ...
Red Lion, settled in 1852, was named after one of the first pubs in town, the Red Lion Tavern. [4] The town was a main stop along the old Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad, known locally as the "Ma & Pa" Railroad. That railroad ran from York County to Baltimore, Maryland. [5] Red Lion was once famous for the many brands of cigars made there.
PA 74 north (Delta Road) – Red Lion: Southern terminus of PA 74 concurrency: 9.637: 15.509: PA 74 south (Delta Road) – Delta, Baltimore: Northern terminus of PA 74 concurrency: Lower Windsor Township: 24.608: 39.603: PA 624 (Craley Road) – Red Lion, Wrightsville PA 124 west (Abels Road) – East Prospect: Northern terminus; eastern ...
Notable non-residential buildings include the Red Lion Table Company building (1913), the Red Lion Cabinet Company building (1917), the C.H. Foreman cigar factory (1912), the W.M. Gemmell & Company factory (1908-1912), the Consolidated Tobacco Company building (1915), the E.A. Strobeck & Company factory, the Roser Building (1876-1890), Odd ...
PA 532 north (Welsh Road) Southern terminus of PA 532: 64.648: 104.041: PA 63 west (Red Lion Road) Southern end of PA 63 concurrency: 65.987: 106.196: PA 63 east (Woodhaven Road) to I-95: Interchange; northern end of PA 63 concurrency: Bucks: Bensalem Township: Southern end of freeway section: 68.074: 109.554: PA 132 (Street Road) Access to ...
It was built by the Maryland and Pennsylvania Railroad to connect two rises of land divided by a ravine. It is one of only two trestle bridges to remain from the original railroad, the other being the Taylor trestle, in York Township, PA, between Red Lion, PA and Dallastown, PA. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in ...