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The Connellsville train wreck was a rail accident that occurred on December 23, 1903, on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad near Connellsville, Pennsylvania. [note 1] The Duquesne Limited, a passenger train, derailed when it struck a load of timber lying on the tracks. The timber had fallen from a freight train minutes before the collision.
The Daily Courier or Daily Courier is the common name for a number of newspapers, including: Grants Pass Daily Courier; The Daily Courier; The Daily Courier in British Columbia; The Daily Courier (North Carolina) Daily Courier, of Connellsville, Pennsylvania, an edition of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Over the years, The Courier Journal has published many front pages on Leap Days. We looked back at some of the most interesting Leap Day headlines on the front page in previous years, going back ...
Connellsville Union Passenger Depot, also known as the Connellsville Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Station, is a historic railway station located at Connellsville, Fayette County, Pennsylvania. It was built between 1911 and 1912 by the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad and Western Maryland Railway. It is a 1 1/2-story, rectangular brick building ...
WBGI (1340 AM) was an American radio station licensed to serve the community of Connellsville, Pennsylvania, approximately 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Pittsburgh.The station was last owned by Keymarket Communications, which also held the final broadcast license. [4]
The main route through Connellsville is U.S. Route 119, which links Connellsville with nearby cities Uniontown and Greensburg, and provides access to many of the business on the outskirts of the city. Pennsylvania Route 201 ends in Connellsville, and PA 711 serves as the main street through downtown before heading into the local mountains.
Bullskin Township/Connellsville Township Joint Sewage Authority is a municipal authority providing sewage treatment in Bullskin Township and Connellsville Township in Fayette County, Pennsylvania. [2] In 2008, an audit of the authority revealed billing irregularities. [3]
In 1990, in accordance with the Department of Environmental Protection mandate, the disposal plant was razed, [2] and a pump interconnecting station to the Connellsville Municipal Authority lines were made. Presently, the SCBMA oversees maintenance and tap-ins of existing locations within South Connellsville Borough.