Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wind Gap (Pennsylvania Dutch: Gratdaal) is a borough in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, United States.The population of Wind Gap was 2,820 at the 2020 census. Wind Gap is part of the Lehigh Valley metropolitan area, which had a population of 861,899 and was the 68th-most populous metropolitan area in the U.S. as of the 2020 census.
The route heads east through the northern Northampton County boroughs of Wind Gap, Pen Argyl, Bangor, and East Bangor, intersecting PA 191 in Bangor. It then continues east to PA 611. PA 512 was originally designated by 1928 to run from PA 12 (now PA 191) in Hecktown north to PA 12 in Wind Gap. In the 1930s, the southern terminus was realigned ...
Former PA 115 near Wind Gap. The southern and northern portions of what became PA 115 from Easton to Wilkes-Barre was originally a pathway made by General John Sullivan and his forces in 1779 during the American Revolutionary War on their expedition from Easton to the Wyoming Valley.
Windgap has six land borders with the Pittsburgh neighborhoods of Esplen to the northeast, Chartiers City to the east, Sheraden and Crafton Heights to the southeast, the borough of Ingram to the south and the Pittsburgh neighborhood of Fairywood from the south to the west.
PA 33 northbound past the PA 512 interchange in Wind Gap, approaching Blue Mountain. In January 2004, the freeway was shut down between Lower Nazareth Township and Stockertown (PA 191) because of a sinkhole that was in the area of the Bushkill Creek directly under a northbound bridge support beam. Crossovers were created, narrowing the highway ...
Groundhog Club handler A.J. Dereume holds Punxsutawney Phil in Punxsutawney, Pa., in 2023. Pennsylvania’s Punxsutawney Phil might be the most well-known weather-predicting groundhog, but a new ...
Wind chills in those cities were between 25 to 40 degrees below zero. On Wednesday in South Dakota, a temperature of negative 38 was recorded in the city of Edgemont, setting a new historic low.
The Slate Belt is a geographic region in Northampton County, Pennsylvania that is typically described as including Bangor, Wind Gap, Pen Argyl, and Portland. [1] The region is named for the historical prevalence of slate quarrying in the area.