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The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources provided a $566,000 grant in 2011 to restore sections of the route as walking trails. The first 2.64 mile stretch from Clarks Summit to Dalton was opened on October 10, 2014. A second, 1.7-mile segment from LaPlume to Factoryville was opened in August 2017. [28] [29]
Prior to 1941, US 11 followed Walnut Bottom Road between Shippensburg and Carlisle while PA 33 ran along the Governor Rittner Highway. In and around Harrisburg, the highway crossed the Susquehanna River to directly service the city using the Carlisle Pike, Market Street, and the Market Street Bridge, leaving north via a concurrency with US 22 ...
Clarks Summit is a borough in Lackawanna County, northwest of Scranton in Northeastern Pennsylvania. The population was 5,108 at the 2020 census . [ 3 ] It is also the northern control city of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Northeast Extension , I-476, though the official terminus is in adjacent South Abington Township .
1941 [16] Became part of rerouted US 11. PA 33 — — Shippensburg: Carlisle: 1941 [16] 1963 Former section of US 11; now PA 174 and PA 465. PA 33: 27.738 [10] 44.640 I-78 in Lower Saucon Township: PA 611 in Stroud Township: 1972 [25] current PA 34: 62.289 [10] 100.244 US 15 Bus. in Gettysburg: US 11 / US 15 near Liverpool
The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, also known as the DL&W or Lackawanna Railroad, was a U.S. Class 1 railroad that connected Buffalo, New York, and Hoboken, New Jersey, and by ferry with New York City, a distance of 395 miles (636 km).
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Clarks_Summit&oldid=16864290"This page was last edited on 23 October 2004, at 17:42 (UTC). (UTC).
The eastern starting point of the Nicholson Cutoff (milepost 152) in Clarks Summit in 1989 shows three Guilford Rail System pusher units awaiting their next assignment after pushing a long freight up the grade from Scranton, Pennsylvania. Note the weed-covered switch in the foreground, a vestige of the old line that ran past the Clarks Summit ...
Dalton is a borough in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, United States.It is part of Northeastern Pennsylvania and is located approximately eight miles north of the city of Scranton in a suburban area known as "the Abingtons."