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Pennsylvania Route 100, 1 mile north of its junction with U.S. Route 1, near Chadds Ford: Birmingham Township: 12: Brinton-King Farmstead: Brinton-King Farmstead: March 21, 2002 : 1301 Brinton's Bridge Road, 162 Baltimore Pike
The 1st Pennsylvania House of Representatives District is located in Erie County, Pennsylvania and includes the following area: [1] Erie (part) Ward 01; Ward 02; Ward 03; Ward 04; Ward 06; Lawrence Park Township; The district boundaries also include Pennsylvania's portion of Lake Erie.
The state congressional district map was redrawn by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in February 2018 after ruling the previous map unconstitutional due to partisan gerrymandering; the previous 1st district was geographically succeeded by the newly redrawn 2nd district which on November 6, 2018, elected Brendan Boyle, the incumbent from the ...
On November 21, 1988, an act of the Pennsylvania General Assembly designated the portion of US 1 in Bucks County between the Pennsylvania Turnpike and the New Jersey border as the Martin Luther King Jr. Expressway after civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. [11] On June 14, 2000, the Roosevelt Boulevard portion of US 1 was designated the ...
Seven Tubs Recreation Area is a publicly accessible recreation area located in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, and owned by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Continuously flowing glacial meltwater gouged a line of smooth tubs in gritty sandstone over 12,000 years ago. [1] The tubs are potholes formed by the ...
This district includes 108 contributing buildings, seven contributing sites, and six contributing structures that are located in the subsistence homestead community of Penn-Craft. The planned community was first built between 1937 and 1943 by the American Friends Service Committee , as a community for unemployed miners.
Porthleven (/ ˌ p ɔː θ ˈ l ɛ v ən /; Cornish: Porthlynn) is a town, civil parish and fishing port near Helston, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The most southerly port in Great Britain, it was a harbour of refuge when this part of the Cornish coastline was infamous for wrecks in the days of sail. [ 1 ]
A primarily residential district, notable non-residential buildings include a tavern/hotel (c. 1800), an I.O.O.F. lodge/town meeting hall (1868), the Morgantown Garage (1920), and a fire hall (1921). Also located in the district are a contributing cemetery and war memorial. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. [1]