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Beech Creek is a borough in Clinton County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 701 at the 2010 census . [ 3 ] It is the setting for Fun Home , a 2006 graphic memoir by Alison Bechdel , who grew up there.
Beech Creek in Orivston. Beech Creek is a 27.3-mile-long (43.9 km) [1] tributary of Bald Eagle Creek in Centre and Clinton counties, in Pennsylvania in the United States. [2]Via Bald Eagle Creek, its water flows to the West Branch Susquehanna River, then the Susquehanna River, and ultimately to Chesapeake Bay.
Beech Creek Township is a township in Clinton County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 966 at the 2020 census. The population was 966 at the 2020 census. [ 2 ]
The Beech Creek Railroad is a defunct railroad which operated in central Pennsylvania between Jersey Shore and Mahaffey. Originally chartered in 1882, it was leased by the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad (later the New York Central Railroad) in 1890 and was directly operated by that company afterwards. Much of the line was abandoned ...
Eagle Valley Rd. (PA 150/old US 220) near Beech Creek Ave., 2.3 miles SW of Lock Haven: Roadside Native American, Paths & Trails, Transportation Leidy Natural Gas Boom: July 29, 1975: SR 4001 just W of the Leidy Bridge, Leidy Twp. Roadside Business & Industry, Oil & Gas Pennsylvania Canal (West Branch Division) June 16, 1952
The Altoona and Beech Creek Railroad was a 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge railroad in Pennsylvania that operated during the late ninteeth and early twentieth centuries. It carried passenger traffic from the vicinity of Altoona to Wopsononock and coal and timber from Wopsononock and Dougherty to Altoona.
The Central Railroad of Pennsylvania was a short railroad of 27.3 miles (43.9 km) built to connect Bellefonte, Pennsylvania with the Beech Creek Railroad (part of the New York Central) at Mill Hall, Pennsylvania. Sustained by shipments from the Bellefonte iron industry, the abandonment of the iron furnaces there led to its demise in 1918.
She graduated with a degree in studio arts and art history in 1981 from Oberlin College. [5] After her father died in 1980, her mother sold the family house, in Beech Creek, Pennsylvania, the small town where Bechdel grew up, and moved to Bellefonte, a less provincial small town near State College with her long-time partner Robert Fenichel. [6]