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The Borough of Jersey Shore had its beginnings in pre-Revolutionary War days, according to newspaper accounts of the town's history.[4]Dean R. Wagner, who prepared the form which helped secure the Jersey Shore Historic District's placement on the National Register of Historic Places, the present day Borough of Jersey Shore, Pennsylvania confirmed in 1975 that the town is located on lands which ...
Other early industrial ventures in Jersey Shore included the American Balance Valve and Machine Works (a maker of railroad valves), the Susquehanna Silk Mill and the Jersey Shore Creamery Company. 203 N. Main Street, Jersey Shore, PA - Jan. 2, 1908. On October 10, 1911, Jersey Shore Hospital was founded by four physicians.
PA44, 1 mi. E of Jersey Shore: Plaque American Revolution, Forts, Military, Native American Blooming Grove Dunkard Meeting House - PLAQUE: August 1, 1931: Meetinghouse, 2 miles E of Balls Mills, .7 mile S of PA 973
A rivalry developed between the two settlements, and those on the eastern shore began referring to the settlement on the western shore as the "Jersey Shore," because the Manning family had relocated from New Jersey. The nickname became so fixed that in 1826 the original name of Waynesburg was officially abandoned and changed to Jersey Shore. [1]
Jersey Shore Pike: August 19, 1947: Grand Army of the Republic Highway (US 6), 3.5 miles east of Coudersport: Roadside Roads, Transportation Lymansville: August 19, 1947: Junction US 6 & PA 872, 2 miles east of Coudersport
The History Center includes the Library & Archives, which preserves hundreds of thousands of books, manuscripts, photographs, maps, atlases, newspapers, films and recordings documenting over 250 years of life in the region; and the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum, a museum-within-a-museum documenting Pittsburgh's extensive sports legacy.
Healing Body, Mind, and Spirit: The History of the St. Francis Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Carnegie Mellon U. Press, 1995. 246 pp. Couvares, Francis G. (1984). The Remaking of Pittsburgh: Class and Culture in an Industrializing City 1877–1919. State University of New York Press. Cowan, Aaron.
Pennsylvania (petit) truss Highway Bridges Owned by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Transportation TR Bridge in Lynn Township: 1880 Removed March 21, 2003: Steinsville: Lehigh: Bowstring arch: Bridge in New Garden Township: 1871 June 22, 1988 Removed March 23, 2010: Landenberg