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Scranton: Second address represents a boundary increase approved December 12, 2024. 10: Dime Bank Building: Dime Bank Building: July 14, 1978 : Wyoming Avenue and Spruce Street: Scranton: 11: Finch Building: Finch Building: June 14, 1976
The Scranton Cultural Center at the Masonic Temple (formerly the Masonic Temple and Scottish Rite Cathedral) is a theatre and cultural center in Scranton, Pennsylvania.The Cultural Center's mission statement is "to rejuvenate a national architectural structure as a regional center for arts, education and community activities appealing to all ages."
Repainted as Lackawanna 663 and 664. Operates excursion trains from Scranton. [17] 514 GP-9: Electro-Motive Division 1958 Operational Operates excursion trains from Scranton. [17] 519 2-8-0: American Locomotive Company 1913 Display, awaiting possible cosmetic restoration 565 2-6-0: American Locomotive Company 1908 Display
A living Legend will make an appearance in Scranton on Sunday. Musician John Legend is expected to be in Lackawanna county as part of a campaign-related visit, say two sources. His ties to the ...
Philadelphia, Old City: 1720–1830 Houses Claimed to be the nation's oldest residential street; two rows of Federal and Georgian brick houses built between 1720 and 1830, with a total of 32 extant houses [8] Wyck House: Philadelphia, Germantown: c. 1700–20, later additions House Stenton: Philadelphia, Germantown: 1723 House
In the early 1900s, Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad president William Truesdale approved a plan to replace the railroad's Scranton station, an old brick structure located on Lackawanna Avenue near Franklin Avenue. The new station, to be built about seven blocks east at 700 Lackawanna Avenue, would be a far grander structure that would ...
Livoti's Old World Market prepares to open its fifth speciality grocery store, its first that also includes a liquor store, in the Laurel Square shopping center in Brick, NJ Friday, March 1, 2024.
The Pavilion (originally known as the Montage Mountain Performing Arts Center [1]) is an outdoor amphitheater located in Scranton, Pennsylvania, within the Montage Mountain Ski Resort. A temporary fixture was originally built in 1992, known as the Montage Mountain Amphitheater. Due to the venue's popularity, a permanent venue opened in 2000.