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The Cambria County Conservation and Recreation Authority was created in 1994 [1] by the Cambria County Commissioners using the Municipal Authorities Act of 1945 to establish recreation opportunities as well as assist with cleanup of streams and rivers due to pollution from coal mining in the county. The authority is overseen by a fifteen-member ...
The Ghost Town Trail is a rail trail in Western Pennsylvania that runs 36 miles (58 km) between Black Lick, Indiana County, and Ebensburg, Cambria County. [1] Established in 1991 on the right-of-way of the former Ebensburg and Black Lick Railroad, the trail follows the Blacklick Creek and passes through many ghost towns that were abandoned in the early 1900s with the decline of the local coal ...
Ebensburg is a borough and the county seat of Cambria County in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. [4] It is located 25 miles (40 km) west of Altoona and surrounded by Cambria Township. It is situated in the Allegheny Mountains at about 2,140 feet (650 m) above sea level. Ebensburg is located in a rich bituminous coal region. In the past, sawmills ...
Oct. 9—EBENSBURG — An Ebensburg-area man is hoping to provide a new entertainment option with his startup business. Rob Rezk opened Ax'd Up, an ax-throwing lounge, last month at 1104 W. High ...
The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR), established in 1995, is the agency in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania responsible for maintaining and preserving the state's 124 state parks and 20 state forests; providing information on the state's natural resources; and working with communities to benefit local recreation and natural areas. [1]
Roughly bounded by Ninth Avenue, the Ebensburg Coal Company Power Building, and Bakerville, in Colver 40°32′36″N 78°47′46″W / 40.543333°N 78.796111°W / 40.543333; -78.796111 ( Colver Historic
Sci-Fi in the Valley Con 2012 was moved from the Cambria County War Memorial Arena in Johnstown, Pennsylvania to the North Central Recreation Center in Ebensburg, Pennsylvania. This occurred due to a local fee that would affect the conventions dealers. [2] [10] [11] In 2013, the convention moved to the Jaffa Shrine and used the bottom floor.
It is located in Ebensburg, Pennsylvania, built in the 1880s during the towns boom as a summer resort location where a number of influential Pittsburgh socialites-as well as wealthy people of note from elsewhere- built cottages or stayed in lavish hotel resorts. It was built on a 30-acre (12 ha) piece of land on the Belmont Tract which existed ...