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The Tiadaghton State Forest is one of eight forest districts in the Pennsylvania Wilds region. The forest district office, the Tiadaghton Resource Management Center, is located just north of the town of Waterville, in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Tiadaghton is the Iroquois name for Pine Creek, but its meaning is unknown. [1]
The Black Forest Trail is a 43.0-mile (69.2 km) [nb 1] hiking trail in north-central Pennsylvania, forming a loop through portions of Tiadaghton State Forest and routed through Pine Creek Gorge and areas of the Allegheny Plateau above the gorge.
Little Pine State Park is a Pennsylvania state park on 2,158 acres (873 ha) in Cummings Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Little Pine State park is along 4.2 miles (6.8 km) of Little Pine Creek, a tributary of Pine Creek, in the midst of the Tiadaghton State Forest.
Pine Creek is a tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River in Potter, Tioga, Lycoming, and Clinton counties in Pennsylvania. The creek is 87.2 miles (140.3 km) long. [ 1 ] Within Tioga County, 23.25 miles (37.42 km) of Pine Creek are designated as a Pennsylvania Scenic River .
Little Pine Creek, one of Pine Creek's major tributaries, has its confluence with Pine Creek in the unincorporated village of Waterville. Cummings Township contains two Pennsylvania state parks. Little Pine State Park is on Little Pine Creek and Pennsylvania Route 4001, 4.0 miles (6.4 km) northeast of Waterville. Upper Pine Bottom State Park is ...
The camps included two near Upper Pine Bottom State Park: CCC Camp S-82-Pa (Waterville, also known as Haneyville) was on Upper Pine Bottom Run about 2.5 miles (4.0 km) west of the park and operated from May 1933 to 1941; [30] CCC Camp S-129-Pa (Little Pine) was at the site of nearby Little Pine State Park and operated from 1933 to 1937.
The Golden Eagle Trail is a large loop with a short entrance trail. The entrance trail begins near Pine Creek at a parking lot off of Pennsylvania Route 414 north of the village of Cammal. [4] The entrance trail begins climbing immediately up the side of Pine Creek Gorge, to the northeast and gently at first alongside Bonnell Run. The junction ...
The western border divided colonial Pennsylvania and Indian Country along Tiadaghton Creek. The colonial government claimed this was Pine Creek, the Kanien'kehá:ka, Oneida, and other indigenous peoples claimed it was Lycoming Creek. The Pennsylvanian government recognized tribal claims and so all land west of Lycoming Creek was considered ...