Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Unlike other forms of municipalities in Pennsylvania, boroughs and towns are not classified according to population. Boroughs designated in the table below with a dagger (†) are home rule municipalities and are also found in the List of Pennsylvania municipalities and counties with home rule charters, optional charters, or optional plans. The ...
Parts of Lycoming County Attached to Westmoreland County until 1806 and to Indiana County until 1830. Thomas Jefferson, third U.S. President 43,612: 657 sq mi (1,702 km 2) Juniata County: 067: Mifflintown: 1831: Parts of Mifflin County: Juniata River, itself named for the Iroquoian word Onayutta, meaning "Standing Stone" 23,243: 394 sq mi ...
Sciota is an unincorporated community in Hamilton Township in Monroe County, Pennsylvania, United States. Sciota is located near the interchange between the southern terminus of U.S. Route 209 Business and U.S. Route 209 .
USGS Geographic Names Information System ; USGS Hydrologic Unit Map - State of Pennsylvania (1974) Shaw, Lewis C. (June 1984). Pennsylvania Gazetteer of Streams Part II (Water Resources Bulletin No. 16). Prepared in Cooperation with the United States Department of the Interior Geological Survey (1st ed.).
Beaver County, Pennsylvania: named for the [[Beaver River (Pennsylvania)}Beaver River]]./ Benzie County, Michigan is an Americanization of the French name, Riviere Aux-Bec-Scies, for the local river. Blanco County, Texas: Blanco is named for the Blanco River. Blanco means white in the Spanish language.
Appenzell Creek [1] is a 11.8-mile-long (19.0 km) [2] tributary of McMichael Creek in Monroe County, Pennsylvania in the United States. The headwaters feed into Trout Lake in Jackson Township in the Pocono Mountains. It meanders in a southwestern direction and joins McMichael Creek just above Sciota.
Map of the United States with Pennsylvania highlighted. There are 56 municipalities classified as cities in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. [1] Each city is further classified based on population, with Philadelphia being of the first class, Pittsburgh of the second class, Scranton of the second class A, and the remaining 53 cities being of the third class.
This is a list of cities and towns along the Susquehanna River and its branches in the United States, in the states of New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. These communities and their surroundings are collectively referred to as the Susquehanna Valley .