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Boiling Springs gets its name from the natural artesian well springs located in and around the town. Boiling Springs ranks seventh in size of springs in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The largest of these springs named "the Bubble" is a 2nd magnitude spring based on its average discharge of around 0.7 cubic meters per second. [5]
Boiling Springs Historic District is a national historic district located at Boiling Springs, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania.The district includes 127 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 1 contributing structure associated with its role as an early iron manufacturing center and surrounding residential areas of Boiling Springs.
This is intended to be a complete list of the official state historical markers placed in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC). The locations of the historical markers, as well as the latitude and longitude coordinates as provided by the PHMC's database, are included below when available.
WV 69 at West Virginia state line in Wayne Township: PA 5 in Lake City: 1927: current Currently the longest state route in Pennsylvania. PA 19: 174: 280 Lewistown: Darbytown: 1926: 1928 Renumbered PA 39 to avoid conflict with US 19; now US 522, US 11, US 6, and PA 652. PA 21: 50.751 [15] 81.676
Boiling Springs or Boiling Spring is the name of several places in the United States: Boiling Springs, North Carolina; Boiling Springs, Pennsylvania; Boiling Springs, South Carolina; Boiling Spring, Alleghany County, Virginia; Boiling Springs State Park, a park in Woodward County, Oklahoma
The unincorporated community of Boiling Springs is near the eastern edge of the township, on the north side of Yellow Breeches Creek. Interstate 81 passes through the northern reaches of the township as it bypasses Carlisle, with access from Exits 44 through 49.
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Fishing in the Boiling Springs Lake tributary to the Yellow Breeches Creek in Boiling Springs Covered bridge over the Creek at Messiah University. Yellow Breeches Creek, [1] also known as Callapatscink Creek, Callapatschink Creek (Lenape for "where it returns") or Shawnee Creek [2] is a 56.1-mile-long (90.3 km) [3] tributary of the Susquehanna River in central Pennsylvania, USA.