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Upper Darby Township, often shortened to Upper Darby, is a home rule township [3] in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States. As of the 2020 census, the township had a total population of 85,681, making it the state's sixth-most populated municipality after Philadelphia , Pittsburgh , Allentown , Reading , and Erie . [ 4 ]
Sellers library founded in 1934 and merged with the municipal library in 1935. Sellers moved into the historic Hoodland house in 1935, with a large modern style building built and connected to the house in 1975. [12] Upper Darby Township/Sellers Library – Municipal Branch 501 Bywood Ave., Upper Darby
Drexel Hill is located in the western part of Upper Darby Township at (39.949962, -75.301841 The neighborhood is eight miles from Center City, Philadelphia and is bordered to the north by Haverford Township, to the east by the Kirklyn, Highland Park, Beverly Hills, and Bywood neighborhoods in Upper Darby Township, to the southeast by the borough of Lansdowne, to the south by the borough of ...
Secane is an unincorporated community in Ridley Township and Upper Darby Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States. [1] At its center is retail shopping and a commuter rail station . Immediately surrounding the center are four large garden apartment complexes surrounded by single-family homes.
Evanston Township, Cook County — formed as Ridgeville Township in 1850; [21]: 103 boundaries changed and renamed Evanston Township in 1857; [21]: 109 [22] dissolved in May 2017 and functions transferred to City of Evanston [23] [24]
In 1941, the cabin became the property of the township of Upper Darby. [6] Afterwards, it was offered to local Girl Scouts who used it as a campsite for several years. Then, a series of Township-appointed tenants lived there until 1964. A partial attempt to fix-up the house was done for the Bicentennial in 1976.
The 69th Street Transportation Center (soon to be known as 69th Street Transit Center [3]) is a SEPTA terminal in the Terminal Square section of Upper Darby Township, Pennsylvania. It serves the Market–Frankford Line, Norristown High Speed Line, Media–Sharon Hill Line, and multiple bus routes.
Trolleys arriving at this station travel between 69th Street Transportation Center in Upper Darby Township, Pennsylvania and Orange Street in Media, Pennsylvania. As part of a major line renovation project in 2010 the shelter at the stop was re-roofed and painted, and a metal bench and platform plantings were added, providing passengers a ...