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University Park: Centre: Central PA: Art: Part of Penn State University, collection includes American and European art, contemporary European and Japanese studio ceramics, Asian art, objects from ancient European, African, and Near Eastern cultures Palmerton Area Heritage Center: State College: Centre: Central PA: Local history
The land on which Samuel S. Lewis Park came together from four different pieces of property. Samuel S. Lewis, the namesake of the park, donated his 35-acre (14 ha) farm to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1954. Walter Stein sold his 1-acre (4,000 m 2) arboretum to the state in the same year. The state bought an additional 15 acres (6.1 ha ...
Lewis and Clark State Park began in May 1922 after the state park board announced a 520-acre (210 ha) park to be located on Lacamas Hill approximately 12 miles (19 km) south of Chehalis on the Pacific Highway. [3] The park was dedicated on September 23, 1922 during a ceremony that included Washington state governor Louis F. Hart. At the time ...
Wild Things Park is a 5,200-seat multi-purpose baseball stadium in North Franklin Township, a suburb of Washington, Pennsylvania. [1] It hosted its first regular season baseball game on May 29, 2002, as the primary tenants of the facility, the Washington Wild Things , lost to the Canton Coyotes , 3-0.
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The Zoo at Nay Aug Park once hosted well-known animals Tilly the elephant and Joshua the donkey. The zoo closed in 1988, and in 1989, their resident elephant, Toni, was shipped to the National Zoo in Washington D.C. [3] [4] The zoo remained closed until the summer of 2003, when it reopened as the Genesis Wildlife Center.
Like all Seattle neighborhoods, the boundaries of the University District are informal; by common usage, the University District is bounded on the west by Interstate 5; on the east by University Village and Union Bay; on the south by Portage Bay and the Lake Washington Ship Canal; and on the north by NE Ravenna Boulevard.
Saint Edward State Park is a 326-acre (132 ha)-park in Kenmore, Washington and Kirkland, Washington. It is part of the Washington State Park System. Before becoming a Catholic seminary and later a state park, the area was logged in the 19th century and again in the 1920s. A series of trails runs through the park for bicyclists and hikers.