Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Delaware County Daily Times - Upper Darby; Ellwood City Ledger - Ellwood City; Erie Times-News - Erie; ... Weekly Press (Philadelphia) (1857–1861, 1883–1905) [291]
Upper Darby Township, often shortened to Upper Darby, is a home rule township [3] in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States. As of the 2020 census, the township had a total population of 85,681, making it the state's sixth-most populated municipality after Philadelphia , Pittsburgh , Allentown , Reading , and Erie . [ 4 ]
Allegheny Electric Cooperative is composed of 14 member electric cooperatives in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, who are all members of the Pennsylvania Rural Electric Association: [2] Adams Electric Cooperative; Bedford Rural Electric Cooperative; Central Electric Cooperative; Claverack Rural Electric Cooperative; New Enterprise Rural Electric ...
Allegheny Energy operated its electric distribution operations under the trade name Allegheny Power. Its regulated subsidiaries were West Penn Power (serving Southwestern and Central Pennsylvania), Monongahela Power ("Mon Power," serving Northern and Southern West Virginia, as well as Hancock and Brooke Counties in the Northern Panhandle), and The Potomac Edison Company (western Maryland ...
Darby Township is home to a diverse population and its industrial districts are popular among shipping companies for their proximity to Philadelphia International Airport. It also is known for being made up of two non-contiguous geographical areas, requiring one to pass through at least two neighboring municipalities to make it from one end of ...
PECO operates in southeastern Pennsylvania and provides electricity to about 1.6 million customers and natural gas to over 511,000 customers. The company's electric service area covers all of the city of Philadelphia and Delaware County; most of Bucks, Chester, and Montgomery counties; and the southeastern corner of York County.
[5] [6] By 1931, the P&W was operating Bullet electric multiple units between 69th Street and Norristown Transportation Center. The Great Hall station house, which opened in 1907 with the Market Street Elevated, was a catalyst for nearby development in Upper Darby, considered to be one of the earliest examples of transit-oriented development. [4]
Millbourne Mills shut down in 1926 and was replaced by a Sears, Roebuck & Co. store, which operated until 1988 when it relocated to Upper Darby, causing financial strain on Millbourne. [7] Millbourne was designated a financially distressed municipality in 1998 and was removed from the list in 2014.