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Willis House (York, Pennsylvania) This page was last edited on 25 October 2010, at 14:30 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4 ...
Smyser-Bair House is a Victorian building and contributing property of the York Historic District in York, Pennsylvania. The house was built in the 1830s as a private home and was purchased by Henry Smyser in the mid 19th century. [1] Smyser-Bair House was owned by the Smyser-Bair family from the mid 19th century to 1979.
Garforth House is a grade I listed building in York, England. The house lies at 54 Micklegate, in the city centre. The site was occupied by two tenements in early-18th century, one of which was purchased by William Garforth, and the other by his nephew, Edmund Garforth. In the 1750s, they cleared the site for the construction of Garforth House ...
This district encompasses 309 contributing buildings and includes notable examples of the Late Victorian and Classical Revival styles. Notable buildings include the Christ Lutheran Church (1812–1814), Odd Fellows Hall (1850), U.S. Post Office (1911), Strand and Capitol Theatre (1923–1925), Elks Home (1860s), Pullman Factory Building (c. 1900), Sylvia Newcombe Center (1892), Friends Meeting ...
Shrewsbury Historic District (Shrewsbury, Pennsylvania) Shrewsbury Railroad Station, Stewartstown Railroad; Sinking Springs Farms; South Road Bridge, Northern Central Railway; Spring Grove Borough Historic District; Springdale Historic District (York, Pennsylvania) Stevens School (York, Pennsylvania) Stewartstown Engine House, Stewartstown Railroad
Ulrich and Mary Strickler immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1737 and purchased two hundred acres of farmland west of the Susquehanna River from the Penn family. Samuel Strickler was born in the stone house in 1875. The family sold the farm during the early twentieth century; it was the subsequently sold in 1943 to York County and used for a prison ...
The first meeting of the York Area United Fire and Rescue Commission was held in September 2007, and a formal consolidation took place on May 5, 2008, establishing York County Company 89. In 2009, the department began selling and removing from service its excessive apparatus and replacing it with new, such as three pumpers with two 2010 models.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 12.9 square miles (33 km 2), of which 12.8 square miles (33 km 2) is land and 0.2 square miles (0.52 km 2), or 1.16%, is water.