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The predecessor to the Edgefield Advertiser was the Anti-Monarchist and South-Carolina Advertiser, first published by Thomas M. Davenport on May 27, 1811. After the War of 1812, Davenport sold the newspaper to Benjamin McNary who changed its name to South-Carolina Republican.
Local government in Pennsylvania is government below the state level in Pennsylvania. There are six types of local governments listed in the Pennsylvania Constitution: county, township, borough, town, city, and school district. [1] [2] All of Pennsylvania is included in one of the state's 67 counties, which are in total subdivided into 2,560 ...
The Daily Local News - West ... Newspapers published in Lancaster, Pennsylvania: ... Maryland, Pennsylvania, & New-Jersey Weekly Advertiser, 1775. The Pennsylvania ...
The Mayor of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, is the elected, chief executive of the city of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA. The mayor is elected for a four-year term. The city of Lancaster, Pennsylvania has had 43 mayors since 1818. [1]
Paul J. Evanko was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania on October 20, 1947. [2] His father, George J. Evanko, was an officer in the Pennsylvania State Police for 37 years. [3] In 1965, he graduated from Lancaster Catholic High School, [4] and in 1969 he graduated from Millersville University with a bachelor's degree in education. [3]
This is a list of notable people who were born, or who have lived in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. William Addams (1777–1858), U.S. representative; David Hayes Agnew (1818–1892), surgeon; Chas Alecxih, NFL defensive lineman; Andy Baldwin, U.S. Navy lieutenant and physician, bachelor of season 10 of The Bachelor
Government of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (1 C, 14 P) H. History of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania (3 C, 3 P) I. Images of Lancaster, Pennsylvania (10 F) P.
History of Lancaster County, Pennsylvania: With biographical sketches of many of its pioneers and prominent men (Closson Press, 1883) online; Henderson, Rodger C. "Demographic patterns and family structure in eighteenth-century Lancaster County, Pennsylvania." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 114.3 (1990): 349-383. online