Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Express-Times was a daily newspaper based in Easton, Pennsylvania. The newspaper provides national news and extensive local news coverage of the Lehigh Valley region of eastern Pennsylvania . Founded in 1855, The Express-Times is the longest continuously published newspaper in the Lehigh Valley and one of the longest continuously published ...
The Daily Local News - West Chester; The Daily News - Huntingdon; The Daily News - McKeesport; The Derrick/The News-Herald - Oil City; Danville News - Danville; Delaware County Daily Times - Upper Darby; Ellwood City Ledger - Ellwood City; Erie Times-News - Erie; The Express - Lock Haven; The Express-Times - Easton; Gettysburg Times ...
Jones founded Bangor, Pennsylvania and established several slate quarries. The industry continued to expand throughout the 19th century, reaching its peak production in 1903. [5] At its 19th century peak, the Slate Belt was the world's largest slate-producing region despite its relatively small geographic size, which is 22 square miles. [6]
Also like Bangor, Wales, Bangor, Pennsylvania has piles of slate residue and shale reminiscent of the area. [6] The population of Bangor was 2,509 in 1890; 4,106 in 1900; 5,369 in 1910; 5,687 in 1940; and 5,187 at the 2020 census. The Bridge in Bangor Borough and Real Estate Building are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [7]
Local news Lehigh Valley Voice: Easton: The Saucon Source: Hyperlocal sauconsource.com: Hellertown: The Home News: Local news The Home News: Northampton County: The Valley Ledger: Information, news, events thevalleyledger.com: Lehigh Valley WAEB (AM) Talk radio Newsradio 790 WAEB: Whitehall: WEST/WHOL: Rhythmic Contemporary Lehigh Valley’s ...
Slate Industry: August 6, 1947: Market St. (PA 512) near 1st St., Bangor: Roadside Business & Industry, Ethnic & Immigration Sullivan Campaign: August 5, 1947: Knox Ave. (SR 2025, former PA 115) near Raub St., just N of Easton
It was available free across the Lehigh Valley in bars, restaurants, and boxes on street corners. The newspaper was founded by its parent company and daily newspaper, The Express-Times in Easton, Pennsylvania. The paper published features on local Lehigh Valley bars, concerts, and restaurants.
The name Mr. Pastie derives from pasty a Cornish word for a type of pie commonly taken by miners to work in the mines of Cornwall. [7] Some of these miners emigrated to the United States and settled in the eastern part of Pennsylvania, where slate was also mined (the "Slate Belt"), bringing their traditional recipes with them. [4]