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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 .
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 ...
Clarks Summit University was a private Baptist Bible college in Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania that offered associate, bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees as well as a high-school dual enrollment option. [5] Besides offering degrees on campus, it also offered undergraduate and graduate degrees online. [6]
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]
The Abington Heights School District is a midsized public school district. It serves the boroughs of Clarks Green and Clarks Summit and the townships of Waverly Township, Glenburn Township, Newton Township, North Abington Township, Ransom Township and South Abington Township in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania.
Baptist Bible College & Seminary, Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania (the school changed its name to Summit University on April 20, 2015, and later to Clarks Summit University) Baptist Bible College (Springfield, Missouri; the school changed its name to Mission University on January 25, 2024; a branch campus once existed in Massachusetts, now called ...
Saturday's freak storm that sparked widespread flash flooding and claimed the life of a Clarks Summit woman was an unwelcome but timely reminder of how quickly circumstances can swamp the status ...
PA 92 and PA 307, from Tunkhannock to Clarks Summit In 1931, [ 4 ] US 6 was extended west to Greeley, Colorado . It left its old route—which then became US 6N —at Waterford and headed south on former PA 5 and US 19 and west on US 322 and former PA 77 into Ohio .