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Secane is an unincorporated community in Ridley Township and Upper Darby Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States. [1] At its center is retail shopping and a commuter rail station . Immediately surrounding the center are four large garden apartment complexes surrounded by single-family homes.
Secane station is a SEPTA Regional Rail station in Secane, Pennsylvania. It serves the Media/Wawa Line and previously served the Pennsylvania Railroad . It is located at Providence Road and South Avenue, and parking is available via permit.
The station has a shed with a roof where people can go inside when it is raining. It also has a half dozen free parking spaces along the tracks on the southeast corner of the railroad crossing at Providence Road. Providence Road station is the location where the Route 101 line leaves State Street and enters a separate right-of-way. A storage ...
[1] [2] The same year, on May 22, the Philadelphia and Western Railroad opened the first segment of what is now the Norristown High-Speed Line, running from 69th Street to a farm on Sugartown Road in Strafford. [5] [6] By 1931, the P&W was operating Bullet electric multiple units between 69th Street and Norristown Transportation Center.
Pennsylvania Route 252 (PA 252) is a north–south state highway in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania that connects PA 320 in Nether Providence Township at its southern terminus to PA 23 in Valley Forge at its northern terminus.
The Media–Sharon Hill Line (MSHL), currently rebranding as the D, [a] is a light rail line in the SEPTA Metro network serving portions of Delaware County, Pennsylvania.The line compromises of two services which terminate at 69th Street Transportation Center in Upper Darby Township, Pennsylvania: Route 101 (currently rebranding as D1) to Media and Route 102 (currently rebranding as D2) to ...
On October 17, 1683, the residents of Providence Township petitioned the Court of Chester County, of which they were then a part, to establish a road from Providence to Chester. The court approved the creation of Providence Great Road (now Route 252). Upper Providence Township and Nether Providence Township, Pennsylvania split in 1687. [6]