|
| Pittsburgh PA is ranked as the
second most beautiful city in America by USA Today. Pittsburgh's downtown is
unique in its triangle shape, formed where the Allegheny & Monongahela
rivers meet to form the mighty Ohio River. Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, no longer the dirty, steel-town of history, is one of the most
photographic cities in America. A city of bridges, mountains, stone buildings,
glass castles, winding rivers, and expansive parks.
|
 |
|
Nickname: Keystone State - During colonial
times Pennsylvania was the middle colony of the original 13 colonies. It held
the colonies together like the "keystone" in a window or door arch.
|
|
Pennsylvania was settled in 1643. Philadelphia
was our state capital during the Revolutionary War and York was the first
capital of the United States.
|
|
| Highest point in PA: Mt. Davis, Somerset County
3,213 feet. Somerset County was also the site of the Sept 11 2001 terrorism
crash of Flight 93. |
|
|
Interesting Pennsylvania Facts and
Trivia
- State Flower: Mountain Laure - Tree: Hemlock
- State Bird: Ruffed Grouse - Animal: Whitetail Deer
- PA is First Among US in: Rural Population, number of licensed hunters,
State Game Lands, covered bridges, potato chip production, pretzel bakeries,
licensed bakeries, meat packing plants, mushroom production, sausage
production, scrapple production
- Pennsylvania 1st state to list their web site URL on a license plate
- The 1st baseball stadium was built in Pittsburgh in 1909
- Hershey PA is considered the Chocolate Capital of the United States
- First automobile service station opened in Pittsburgh in 1913
- The first daily newspaper was published in Philadelphia on 9/21/1784
- Philadelphia is the site of the first presidential mansion
- Betsy Ross made the first American flag in Philadelphia
- Philadelphia is home to the cheesesteak sandwich, water ice, soft pretzels,
and TastyKakes
- The Rockville Bridge in Harrisburg is the longest stone-arch bridge in the
world
- Kennett Square is known as the Mushroom Capital of the World
- The Declaration of Independence was signed in Philadelphia in 1776
- Philadelphia is home to the Liberty Bell
- Each year on Christmas day the "Crossing of the Delaware" is
reenacted at Washington Crossing
- Pennsylvania is the only original colony not bordered by the Atlantic Ocean
- Benjamin Franklin founded the Philadelphia Zoo, the first public zoo in the
United States
- Pittsburgh is famous for manufacturing steel. Its professional football
team is named the Pittsburgh Steelers
- Fairmount Park in Philadelphia is the largest city park with over 8,000
acres
- Little League Baseball's first World Series was held in 1946 in
Williamsport
- Philadelphia was once the United States capital city
- The oldest stone railroad bridge in use in Pennsylvania is the Starrucca
Viaduct that crosses PA Route 171 north of Lanesboro in Susquehanna County
- The Borough of Kane is known as the Black Cherry Capital of the World
- During the depression canned goods served as admission to The Star Theater
in Mercersburg to help supply the local soup kitchen
- Located in the Grape Coast region of Pennsylvania the city of North East
has four thriving wineries and is home to the largest Welch's grape processing
plant in the country
- Penn Township, officially referred to as the Township of Penn, was named
after the founder of Pennsylvania, William Penn
- Punxsutawney citizens are proud to be over shadowed by their town's most
famous resident the world-renowned weather forecasting groundhog Punxsutawney
Phil. Punxsutawney is billed as the weather capital of the world
|
|
|
 |
The PA Bureau of State Parks
provides both day and night guided walks, campfire
programs, historical programming, interpretive brochures, exhibits and other
interpretive services.
Go to the
Calendar of Events for information on upcoming progams and events in PA.
|
|
 |
Preserving Pennsylvania Bridges
For the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation
(PENNDOT), bridge maintenance is not just about fixing bridges when they break
down: It's about using preventive maintenance to breathe new life into
not-so-new bridges and take care of structures before they have the chance to
deteriorate.
Pennsylvania maintains the third largest number of
State bridges in the country, spending $300 million on 250 bridge projects each
year. PENNDOT has found that both proper and frequent inspections and a good
preventive maintenance program are vital to extending performance, keeping
costs down, and ensuring safety.
reprinted with persmission from
United States Department
of Transportation - Federal Highway Administration
|
|
Copyright ©2004-2008 state pa.org - All Rights Reserved |
|