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Lawrence Township forms the western, southern and eastern borders of Lawrenceville. The township is bordered by the Towns of Tuscarora, Lindley, and Caton in Steuben County, New York to the north, Jackson Township to the east, Tioga Township to the south, Farmington Township to the south and west and Nelson Township to the west.
Lawrenceville is located at (41.996564, -77.125159). [4] It is at the intersection of Pennsylvania Route 287 and Pennsylvania Route 49. The only traffic light in town can be found at this intersection. Lawrenceville is on the banks of the Tioga and Cowanesque rivers.
The Lawrenceville Historic District is a U.S. historic district in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, which encompasses the majority of the Lawrenceville neighborhood. The historic district includes 3,217 contributing resources, many of which are rowhouses, commercial buildings, and former industrial properties built between the 1830s and early 20th century. [2]
The UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh opened a new facility in Lawrenceville on May 2, 2009, moving all patients from Oakland. [12] This addition has helped spawn Lawrenceville's transformation, bringing new job and business opportunities to the area. The New York Times has since called the neighborhood a "go-to destination." [13]
Northern terminus of PA 349: Westfield Township: 32.1: 51.7: PA 249 south – Little Marsh: West end of PA 249 overlap: Deerfield Township: 34.6: 55.7: PA 249 north – Austinburg: East end of PA 249 overlap: Lawrence Township: 52.3: 84.2: I-99 / US 15 – Corning, Mansfield: Exit 196 on I-99: Lawrenceville: 53.0: 85.3: PA 287 south (Main ...
The United States Office of Management and Budget [14] has designated Lawrence County as the New Castle, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). As of the 2010 U.S. census [ 15 ] the micropolitan area ranked 3rd most populous in the State of Pennsylvania and the 48th most populous in the United States with a population of 91,108.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 759 square miles (1,970 km 2), of which 751 square miles (1,950 km 2) is land and 8.7 square miles (23 km 2) (1.1%) is water. [10] The topography consists of rolling hills and valleys and it is part of the region known as the Piedmont .
Created out of Pitt Township in 1833, it originally included most of what is now the eastern part of the city of Pittsburgh from the Monongahela River in the south (today's Hazelwood) to the Allegheny River in the north. Portions of Peebles broke away to form the borough of Lawrenceville (1834) and the townships of Collins (1850) and Liberty ...