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State Line was originally called Middleburg, and under the latter name laid out in 1812, and named for its location between Greencastle and Hagerstown, Maryland. [3] The present name comes from the fact that the community is located on the Maryland-Pennsylvania state line. [3] A post office called State Line was established in 1830. [4]
In the CEC system, this ecoregion is named the Eastern Great Lakes and Hudson Lowlands, and is identified as region 8.1.1. In the west it meets ecoregion 8.1.2, the Lake Erie Lowland. In the east it meets 5.3.1, the North Appalachian and Atlantic Maritime Highlands.
State Line (the United States) Show map of the United States Coordinates: 39°43′30″N 78°46′3″W / 39.72500°N 78.76750°W / 39.72500; -78
It draws its name from its location four miles (6 km) east of the center of Erie, Pennsylvania. The watershed consists of portions of Greene, Harborcreek, and Lawrence Park townships, as well as Wesleyville, Pennsylvania. Fish migration improvement projects have included the destruction of two dams in 2007 and the planned construction of two ...
PA 36/PA 164 turns south and passes between the railroad line and woods to the west and the creek and a quarry to the east, coming to an intersection with the northern terminus of PA 867. At this point, the two routes continues east and cross into the borough of Roaring Spring, passing businesses. The road turns south near Nason Hospital, with ...
As a last resort, water from Eddy Creek and the Lackawanna River were used in an attempt to extinguish it. [12] Historically, there was a dam on the creek. The dam was owned by the Delaware and Hudson Company and was used for impounding water to flush ashes from a power plant. The creek also supplied water for a washery at the Underwood ...
U.S. Geological Survey: PA stream gaging stations; Map of old Conestoga River; Aerial image of Conestoga River flowing east and south of Lancaster, PA; Conestoga River near Slackwater, PA; Little Conestoga Watershed Alliance; Conestoga Trail map - northern section (Links to other sections of the trail are found on the right at this link.)
Conewago Creek is an 80.2-mile-long (129.1 km) [1] tributary of the Susquehanna River in Adams and York counties in Pennsylvania in the United States, with its watershed also draining a small portion of Carroll County, Maryland. The source is at an elevation of 1,440 feet (440 m), east of Caledonia State Park, in Franklin Township in Adams