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The towns of Barclay and Laquin are in close proximity of each other. Barclay came and went before Laquin, Pennsylvania. The first mined coal and the second processed timber from the surrounding forests. The Barclay Railroad was abandoned in 1899, damaged by a flood in 1900, and rebuilt as the Susquehanna and New York Railroad.
Pa. 14, .2 miles from state line (MISSING) Roadside Government & Politics, Government & Politics 17th Century, William Penn Pennsylvania: September 27, 1949: U.S. 220 & 309, .3 miles from state line Roadside Government & Politics, Government & Politics 17th Century, William Penn Philip P. Bliss: May 12, 1947: Pa. 187 in Rome at cemetery Roadside
Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, garden cemetery founded 1836; Lawnview Memorial Park, Rockledge, Pennsylvania; Lebanon Cemetery, Philadelphia; Leverington Cemetery, Philadelphia; Lincoln Cemetery, Chambersburg; Lincoln Cemetery (Harrisburg, Pennsylvania) Lobb's Cemetery and Yohogania County Courthouse Site, West Elizabeth; Magnolia Cemetery ...
This is an incomplete list of ghost towns in Pennsylvania. Many of the ghost towns in Pennsylvania are located in Western Pennsylvania, particularly in the Appalachian and Allegheny regions of the Rust Belt. [1] During the late 19th century and early 20th century, the mountainous parts of Pennsylvania were home to a booming coal industry. [2]
Old North Cemetery: Concord: New Hampshire: 15 James Buchanan [22] June 1, 1868: Woodward Hill Cemetery: Lancaster: Pennsylvania: 16 Abraham Lincoln [23] April 15, 1865 [G] Lincoln Tomb, [K] Oak Ridge Cemetery: Springfield: Illinois: 17 Andrew Johnson [24] July 31, 1875: Andrew Johnson National Cemetery: Greeneville: Tennessee: 18 Ulysses S ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map. [1]
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Copy (1857) after George Washington by Jean-Antoine Houdon (1791), North Carolina State Capitol, Raleigh; Copy (1910) plaster, after George Washington by Antonio Canova (1820, destroyed by fire 1831), North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh