Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Henryville is a census-designated place (CDP) in Monroe Township, Clark County, in the U.S. state of Indiana. [4] The population was 1,905 at the 2010 census. Henryville is home to Indiana's oldest state forest, Clark State Forest , and birthplace of entrepreneur Colonel Harland Sanders , whose iconic image appears in the Kentucky Fried Chicken ...
Henryville is an unincorporated community in Paradise Township, Monroe County, Pennsylvania, United States. Henryville is located by the intersection of Pennsylvania Route 191 and Pennsylvania Route 715 .
The highest point on the terrain is a ridge WNW of Henryville near the border with Scott County, at 1,030 ft (310 m) ASL. [8] According to the 2010 census, the county has a total area of 376.45 square miles (975.0 km 2), of which 372.86 square miles (965.7 km 2) (or 99.05%) is land and 3.60 square miles (9.3 km 2) (or 0.96%) is water. [9]
Henryville is an unincorporated community in Lawrence County, Tennessee, United States. [1] It lies along State Route 240 at its junction with State Route 242, southwest of Summertown, northwest of Lawrenceburg, and just south of the Buffalo River. The community was first settled around 1815, and was named after its first postmaster when a ...
The township contains several cemeteries: Blue Lick Cemetery (a.k.a. Mountain Grove), Bowerman Cemetery, Cass, Clegg (a.k.a. Mt. Moriah), Collings, Dieterlen Grave ...
The northern terminus is at PA 191 in the Paradise Township hamlet of Henryville. PA 715 also intersects Interstate 80 (I-80) in Tannersville at Exit 299. The route is a two-lane undivided road running through forested areas of the Pocono Mountains. The road was paved between 1930 and the 1940s.
The first section of I-65 to be completed in Indiana was the 16 miles (26 km) section between Jefferson and SR 160 in Henryville, which was dedicated and opened by then-Governor Harold W. Handley on September 14, 1960.
Clark State Forest, located just north of Henryville, Indiana in the United States, is Indiana's oldest state forest, formed in 1903 as a forest research facility and a nursery and later expanded by the Works Progress Administration.