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Codorus Forge and Furnace Historic District, also known as Hellem (Hellam) Forge, is a historic iron forge and national historic district located at Hellam Township in York County, Pennsylvania. The district includes four contributing buildings, one contributing site, and one contributing structure.
Hellam Township is a township in York County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 5,921 at the 2020 census . [ 2 ] Founded in 1739, it was the first township in the area, and it originally included the entirety of modern York and Adams counties.
Hellam Township was created and included most of what is now York, Adams and Cumberland counties. Hellam Township was named after Hallamshire, the township in England where Samuel Blunston, the magistrate of Lancaster County, was born. When Hallam Borough was incorporated in 1902, the town's name was spelled Hallam, the same as the English ...
The U.S. state of Pennsylvania is divided into 1,546 townships, located in 66 of Pennsylvania's 67 counties. For listings of townships in individual counties, see the category Townships in Pennsylvania by county
Map of the United States with Pennsylvania highlighted in red. Pennsylvania is a state located in the Northeastern United States.As of the 2020 U.S. census, Pennsylvania is the fifth-most populous state with 13,002,700 inhabitants [1] and the 32nd-largest by land area spanning 44,742.70 square miles (115,883.1 km 2) of land. [2]
Chickies Rock (1892) Part of an eastward extension of the Hellam Hills, Chickies Ridge has been separated from them by a water gap cut by the Susquehanna. The ridge is composed of uplifted Cambrian Chickies Formation, [1] which extends several miles east before merging into the surrounding uplands.
A man riding a bicycle died after a collision with a vehicle on Mt. Pisgah Road in Hellam Township, according to a York County Coroner news release. The incident happened at about 10:15 a.m ...
Mike Argento wrote about it in the York Daily Record, and Matt Lake featured a section on the gates in his book, Weird Pennsylvania. [2] [6] Hellam Township published a page debunking the myths. [3] Local resident Cheryl Englar reported a number of tourists searching for the gates, some harassing her and giving her cause to call the police. [7]