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The Whites' Woods Nature Center is a 250-acre (1.0 km 2) nature center in Indiana County, Pennsylvania, USA. [1] It is publicly owned by White Township . [ 2 ]
Airport Road, just off PA 286 at E end of Indiana 0°37′58″N 79°07′07″W / .632850°N 79.118683°W / .632850; -79.118683 ( Rural Electrification Roadside
East of U.S. Route 422 on Diehl Road, east of Indiana 40°36′29″N 78°58′43″W / 40.608056°N 78.978611°W / 40.608056; -78.978611 ( George Diehl Homestead Cherryhill Township
Yellow Creek State Park is a Pennsylvania state park on 2,981 acres (1,206 ha) in Brush Valley and Cherryhill Townships, Indiana County, Pennsylvania in the United States. The park encompasses parts of Yellow Creek and Little Yellow Creek. The old Kittanning Path goes through the parkland. The park was established in 1963.
The park is along the edge of the old Buffalo Trace, a historic bison migration trail that was later converted into a road. In 1971, the 30-acre (120,000 m 2) man-made Lake Coleman was added to the park and stocked with fish, and is maintained by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources. The park's amenities include public camping, fishing ...
Unlike most state parks in Indiana, Fort Harrison is a day-use park, with its only overnight facilities being the inn, The Fort Golf Resort, which was the old officers' club. [13] The fort's eighteen-hole golf course makes the park popular with Indianapolis golfers; it was redesigned by Pete Dye after the fort's closure, making it a 72-par course.
The name Bendix Woods originates from the Bendix Corporation which donated the land to St. Joseph County for the creation of a park. The park's historical significance, however, dates to its establishment by the Studebaker Corporation, formerly of nearby South Bend, Indiana, as the first model test facility for an American automobile company.
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 ...