Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The bridge was closed and remained under repairs as of late 2006, but is now fixed and once again open. Today, the bridge mostly serves as a crossing for horseback riders riding the trails to and from Shady Grove Dude Ranch. It also attracts history buffs and other visitors as well.
Pine Grove is a borough in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, United States. As of the 2020 census, the borough population was 2,054. [3] Pine Grove Area School District, serving students from three municipalities and multiple surrounding townships, is located in the borough.
The Pine Grove Armory, which is located at 143 South Tulpehocken Street, is a 10,182-square-foot brick, castellated, Gothic Revival structure which was built circa 1908. It was once home to the 228th Brigade Support Battalion's D Company. [8] [9] In 2015, newspapers reported that the Borough of Pine Grove purchased the former armory building. [10]
PA 125 does not directly access Interstate 81 (I-81); however, north of Pine Grove, there is an interchange with SR 3013 (Molleystown Road) just yards from the highway in Ravine. The route has a concurrency with U.S. Route 209 (US 209) in Tremont and crosses PA 25 in Hegins .
For more than 100 years, vacationers have visited the legendary Omni Grove Park Inn to golf, dine, unwind at its underground spa, and take in the unmatched views from Sunset Mountain.
One men’s store specializing in bathing suits and shorts has closed, and a new shoe store is replacing it. Hey Dude, a shoe store with an emphasis on leisure is opening at the Tanger Outlets ...
Grove Park Inn remains closed almost one month after Helene dropped torrential rain and damaging floods across western North Carolina. The Hotel announced it was closed on Sep. 29 and was not ...
The Swatara Furnace [7] [8] and ironmaster's mansion, the first two of the structures to be erected along Mill Creek and which now make up part of the Swatara Furnace Historic District, were built circa 1830, creating an "iron plantation," which was typical of the furnace-ironmaster home complexes erected across eastern and central Pennsylvania during the early to mid-nineteenth century.