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Topic: Pulaski Township, Pennsylvania


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  History of Lawrence County Pennsylvania 1877
The township is watered by several streams, the largest being the Shenango river, along the east bank of which the bed of the old Erie Extension of the Pennsylvania canal is seen, and along whose west bank is laid the track of the Erie and Pittsburgh railway.
The number of schools in Pulaski township in 1875 was eleven, having an average attendance of two hundred and fifty-one.
Bedford's land laid along the State line in Pulaski township and extended north from a narrow vacancy, which was about twenty rods wide at the State line, and terminated in a point at a distance of two or three miles to the east.
www.rootsweb.com /~usgenweb/pa/lawrence/1877/pulaski.htm   (10809 words)

  
 Rochester Township, Pennsylvania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rochester Township is a township in Beaver County, Pennsylvania.
In the township the population was spread out with 22.2% under the age of 18, 6.6% from 18 to 24, 27.0% from 25 to 44, 25.4% from 45 to 64, and 18.7% who were 65 years of age or older.
The median income for a household in the township was $37,284, and the median income for a family was $41,607.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Rochester_Township,_Pennsylvania   (360 words)

  
 Moland House - Pulaski at Moland House
By the time Count Casimir Pulaski met with Silas Deane and Benjamin Franklin in Paris to accept their offer and journey to America to fight for the freedom of the colonies, he already was famous in Europe as a top cavalry commander and an indomitable soldier.
Yet, before the appointment was confirmed by Congress, Pulaski proved his worth by using an improvised cavalry formation to cover the colonials’ retreat at the Battle of Brandywine.
While Pulaski was visiting the wounded Lafayette who was recuperating near Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, he ordered an embroidered banner for his legion from the Moravian Sisters, a religious community of women that had settled in the area.
moland.org /index.php?page=pulaski_at_moland_house   (421 words)

  
 Pulaski County Biography Ref. Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The subject of this biography learned the miller’s trade in his father’s mill, at Pulaski, and in 1877, he and his brother purchased the steam mills in Winamac, and engaged actively in the manufacture of flour; at the present he is entirely alone.
J.M. KLINE is a native of Union County, Penn., and was born in 1835.
JAMES MULVANY is a native of Pennsylvania, was born in 1838, and is the fifth in a family of seven children born to James and Ann Mulvany, natives of Ireland, who came to America after they had attained their majority and were here married.
members.tripod.com /~debmurray/pulaski/pulbioref-3.htm   (4528 words)

  
 MAHONING TOWNSHIP   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
He located afterwards in Washington County, Pennsylvania, and in 1796 came with his wife and several children to what is now Mahoning Township, Lawrence County, and settled on a 400-acre tract belonging to Judge Alexander Wright, getting 100 acres for settling.
About 1794-6 he came from Washington County, Pennsylvania, where he had been living, with his wife and five children, to what is now Mahoning Township, and purchased several tracts of land, which is equal to any within its limits.
During the rebellion Mahoning Township furnished her share of troops for the grand army which marched to the "sunny South," and left so many of its members in death's embrace, on gory fields where they fought and fell, that the Union they loved might remain unbroken.
www.pitt.edu /~spano/mahtown.htm   (4416 words)

  
 [No title]
Kazimierz is born in Warsaw at the Pulaski residence on the corner of Nowy Swiat and Warecka Streets.
Pulaski is mortally wounded in the attack on Savannah
A corner stone is laid for Casimir Pulaski's monument by Lafayette in Savannah's Chippewa Square.
www.poles.org /PulaskiBio.html   (2067 words)

  
 Pulaski County Biography Ref. Page
LEVI WHITE was born in this township June 19, 1849, and is the son of William and Mary E. (Hilderbrand) White, natives of Ohio, and born in 1816 and 1817, respectively.
JOHN COOPER was born in Logansport, Cass Co., Ind., December 18, 1851, one of seven children born to William and Mary (Weible) Cooper, the former a native of Delaware, and the latter of Germany.
ANDREW S. HACKETT was born on the eastern shore of Maryland December 22, 1814, and is one of the eleven children born to Tilman and Catherine (Walker) Hackett, natives respectively of Maryland and Delaware.
members.tripod.com /~debmurray/pulaski/pulbioref-15.htm   (5228 words)

  
 Pulaski township, Beaver County, Pennsylvania (PA) Detailed Profile
Pulaski township, Beaver County, Pennsylvania (PA) Detailed Profile
64% of Pulaski township residents lived in the same house 5 years ago.
Out of people who lived in different counties, 53% lived in Pennsylvania.
www.city-data.com /township/Pulaski-Beaver-PA.html   (98 words)

  
 History of Tredyffrin Township : Tredyffrin Township
Few townships in Pennsylvania are as rich in history as Tredyffrin Township, which is located at the easternmost edge of Chester County, Pennsylvania.
Ten or Tre is the Welsh word for town or township, and Dyffrin means a wide cultivated valley; from these words comes the compound tre yr dyffrin, or Tredyffrin, meaning a township in a wide cultivated valley.
The Township had its beginning in 1682 when a group of Welsh Quakers went to William Penn in England and purchased, at a price of ten cents an acre, forty thousand acres of land in southeastern Pennsylvania.
www.tredyffrin.org /general/history.aspx   (993 words)

  
 History
Located along the Beaver River and nestled in the rolling hills of north east Beaver County, Daugherty Township was incorporated on January 27, 1894 through the division of Pulaski Township.
Daugherty Township is the home of Beaver County’s first Catholic cemetery, originally known as the Daugherty Cemetery, it is located at the intersection of Pittsburgh and Allendale Roads.
In 1900, the population of Daugherty Township was 533.
www.daughertytownship-pa.gov /history.jsp?pageId=0690200091781075315132073   (1590 words)

  
 Pulaski, Pennsylvania PA, township profile (Beaver County) - hotels, festivals, genealogy, newspapers - ePodunk
Pennsylvania > All counties > Beaver County > Pulaski
Pulaski is a township in Beaver County, in the Pittsburgh metro area.
· Immigrants in Pennsylvania from 1727 to 1776
www.epodunk.com /cgi-bin/genInfo.php?locIndex=276437   (691 words)

  
 ncnewsonline.com - Pulaski management questioned   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Editor, The News: Since it is my right as a resident of Pennsylvania -- and more so as a resident of Pulaski Township -- I recently went to the township building and filled out a form requesting certain township records.
Apparently, after cutting the road crew hours -- a no-overtime policy -- the township didn't want anyone to know it is still paying overtime to go to the bank and post office, to watch the carpets be scrubbed and to meet with the new township supervisor.
One even stated, "What am I supposed to do?" To condone this proves the fact that there is no management in Pulaski Township, and three incompetent individuals who don't care to shoulder responsibility and perform their jobs.
www.newcastlenews.net /letters/local_story_237111625   (459 words)

  
 Pulaski - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kazimierz Pułaski (Casimir Pulaski), a Polish military commander and American Revolutionary War hero
ORP Generał Kazimierz Pułaski a Polish Navy frigate
Pulaski Blue Jays, a minor-league American baseball team
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pulaski   (151 words)

  
 Moland House
Reenactors of the Second Regiment of the Continental Line, the 5th Pennsylvania Regiment and the First Continental Regiment of Foot, saluted General Pulaski, portrayed by Peter Obst, as they fired volleys from their flintlock muskets which echoed down the Little Neshaminy Creek Valley.
Pulaski also delivered a letter to Lafayette from his wife in France.
Warren Williams, president of the Warwick Township Historical Society was master of ceremonies and introduced U.S. Congressman Jim Greenwood, Bucks County Judge Rufe, Chairman of the Bucks County Commissioners Michael Fitzpatrick and L. Graham of the Pennsylvania Cincinnati Society.
www.poles.org /Moland.html   (375 words)

  
 Pennsylvania State Association of Township Supervisors
Organics recycling diverts significant resources from disposal, yet there are many opportunities for advancement in Pennsylvania.
Leaf and yard trimmings are composted in countless back yards across the Commonwealth yet the public interest in new home composting programs remains strong.
Representatives from the PA Department of Environmental Protection, Professional Recyclers of Pennsylvania, the PA Recycling Markets Center and Penn State University will be present at each workshop.
www.psats.org /onesource/managing_organics06.html   (547 words)

  
 Pulaski Township Pennsylvania
We are a small rural township in Western Pennsylvania on the PA /OH State lines.
We need any information that the Pulaski Township Area would like to see on this Website.
Township Ordinances are now available on the Municipal Government Page
www.pulaskitownship.com /index.html   (140 words)

  
 Committee Reports   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
As in previous years, these projects were determined by non-governmental, independent analysis based upon their unique and diverse geology and geography, their ability to provide the greatest technological diversity using limited financial resources, and the commitment of each community or regional area to find and fund appropriate alternative technologies to resolve their wastewater treatment needs.
$1,500,000 to Derry Township Municipal Authority in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania for wastewater infrastructure improvements.
$500,000 to Lycoming County, Pennsylvania for water and wastewater infrastructure improvements in the Boroughs of Hughesville and Muncy and at Halls Station.
www.congress.gov /cgi-bin/cpquery?&dbname=cp107&&r_n=hr740.107&sel=TOC_372544&   (6820 words)

  
 Booksmith Free Speech Information Page
There is also blasphemy and the book promotes domestic violence and alcohol abuse." The book was donated by the Lions Club in a book drive.
--- was removed from the curriculum in Pulaski Township, Pennsylvania.
Two parents described the book as profane, disrespectful of adults, and said it created an elaborate fantasy they felt might lead to confusion about reality.
www.booksmith.com /censorship.html   (1255 words)

  
 Old Maps, Prints and Articles of Historical and Genealogical Interest from Pennsylvania
PABU59 [1] Engravings of Farm and Residence of Hannah J. Wildman, Bensalem Township; Farm and Residence of Mrs.
PACF49 [1] (Engraving) Residence and farm of Elisha M. Davis, Penn Township, 250 acres; residence and farm of john Widemire, Penn Twnship, 161 acres; Storeroom, residence and barn of L. Coudriet, Frenchville.
PACR65A [1] (Engraving) Residence of John Minnis, East Fallowfield Township, Crawford County, PA PACR65B [1] (Engraving) Residence of Joseph Duncan, dealer in hides, pelts, furs and poultry, Adamsville, PA PACR66A [1] (Engraving) Portraits of Thomas W. McCalmont, and Mrs.
www.oldmapsetc.com /old-maps-pennsylvania-towns.html   (17695 words)

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