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Because "Friendship" is a new name for an old neighborhood, Friendship's western border with Bloomfield is to some extent a disputed one. The City of Pittsburgh defines neighborhoods to be contiguous with federal census tracts, and as a result considers Friendship to abut Bloomfield at South Graham Street, at the western edge of census tract ...
Kuykendall-Forsyth-Reed farm 1768, 1852 561 State Route 885 Jefferson Township 1979 "La Tourelle" (Edgar J. Kaufmann house) 1924 Janssen & Cocken 8 La Tourelle Lane Fox Chapel 2003 Mr. & Mrs. Jack Landis house: 1957 Peter Berndtson and Cornelia Brierly: 2717 Mount Royal Road Squirrel Hill 2012
Friendship Hill is a parcel of land 675 acres (273 ha) in size, located on the east bank of the Monongahela River between New Geneva and Point Marion in rural southwestern Pennsylvania. The property's main house, also known as the Albert Gallatin House, is located atop a bluff that is the high point of the property.
America's vanishing farmland isn't a new problem. Suburban sprawl and a lack of interest among the younger generation are among the reasons why farms -- many of them family-owned -- have steadily ...
Francis Farm Petroglyphs Site (36FA35) Francis Farm Petroglyphs Site (36FA35) May 10, 1984 ... Friendship Hill National Historic Site. October 15, 1966
Joseph Crocker Sibley, Jr., known to his family and friends as "Joe," was born in Friendship, Allegany County, New York on February 18, 1850. [1] His father, Joseph Crocker Sibley, Sr., was a medical doctor; his mother, the former Lucy Elvira Babcock, was a school teacher in the years before marriage. [2]
The Troyer family, which owned Troyer Farms snack food company from 1967 until 2008, hopes to launch a new potato-processing plant by this fall. This time around, they plan to make organic frozen ...
In 1950, the Eisenhowers found a "run-down farm" on the outskirts of Gettysburg, and purchased the farm and its 189 acres (76 ha) for $40,000 (equal to $506,556 today) from one Allen Redding, who had owned the farm since 1921. Eisenhower stated that he could feel the "forgotten heroisms" that occurred on the grounds during the Battle of Gettysburg.