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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).
When timetables are constructed by hand, the process is often 10% mathematics and 90% politics, [2] leading to errors, inefficiencies, and resentment among teachers and students." [1] For the simplest school timetable, such as an elementary school, these conditions must be satisfied: [3] a teacher cannot teach two courses in the same time slot
Replaced by the 1789 third meeting house, housed a Friends School; now divided into apartments Tyburn Road at New Falls Road, Fallsington 40°11′06″N 74°49′12″W / 40.1850°N 74.8200°W / 40.1850; -74.8200 ( Falls Meeting
A full circuit can take up to three hours to complete, with the service carrying 50,000 passengers each day. [4] There are 266 bus stops on the route. [6] The route serves 233 schools, colleges or universities, 69 leisure and community facilities, 40 pubs, 19 retail centres, six hospitals, and one prison. [17]
Birmingham Friends Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house at 1245 Birmingham Road in Birmingham Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania. The current meetinghouse was built in 1763. The building and the adjacent cemetery were near the center of fighting on the afternoon of September 11, 1777 at the Battle of Brandywine.
US Route 202 southbound and US Route 322 eastbound in Birmingham Township As of 2020, there were 38.90 miles (62.60 km) of public roads in Birmingham Township, of which 13.50 miles (21.73 km) were maintained by Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT) and 25.40 miles (40.88 km) were maintained by the township.
In its earliest years, the school benefited from the ease of transportation afforded by the passage of the Pennsylvania railroad through Birmingham. [citation needed] Currently, the school still operates as Grier School, a boarding school for girls. The East Coast earthquake on August 23, 2011 caused a rockslide along Route 453 in Birmingham. [5]
The route was introduced in 2016 as a replacement for route 141. It operated between the same terminuses, Birmingham and Merry Hill Shopping Centre , but runs as an express service with a frequency of one bus every 20 minutes.