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It was incorporated as a borough on April 21, 1879, from a section of Dallas Township. [1] The township, formed in 1817, [1] and was named for Alexander J. Dallas, the 6th United States Secretary of the Treasury and the father of George M. Dallas the vice president of James Polk. The Borough of Dallas is known as the “Pride” of the Back ...
Dallas was first settled in 1797. It was later incorporated as a borough on April 21, 1879, from land entirely within Dallas Township. [5] The township had been formed in 1817 [5] and was named for Alexander J. Dallas, who was the 6th United States Secretary of the Treasury and the father of George M. Dallas, the vice president of James Polk.
PA 309 north (North Cross Valley Expressway) – Luzerne, Dallas: PA 309 exit 5; access to northbound PA 309 and access from southbound PA 309: West Pittston: 188.6: 303.5: PA 92 north (Exeter Avenue) – Tunkhannock: Southern terminus of PA 92: Pittston Township–Dupont line: 191.7: 308.5: To I-81 – Hughestown, Dupont
This road became a rerouted PA 115, which continued west to Hughesville along the former alignment of PA 642. In addition, PA 115 was rerouted to follow the new alignment from Lehman to PA 415 in Dallas, where it turned southeast and picked up a concurrency with U.S. Route 309 (US 309). [9]
Dallas Township is a township in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is part of the Back Mountain , a 118 square mile (306 km 2 ) region in northern Luzerne County. The population was 9,124 at the 2020 census.
The route around the eastern side of Harveys Lake was designated as PA 515 in 1928 along with PA 415. In 1946, PA 515 was decommissioned entirely and PA 415 was truncated back to the new PA 29 in Ruggles. At that point, PA 415 was signed in both directions, with the SR 1415 designation coming along by 1990.
Pennsylvania Route 73 (PA 73) is a 62.32-mile (100.29 km) long east–west state highway in southeastern Pennsylvania.It runs from PA 61 near Leesport southeast to the New Jersey state line on the Tacony–Palmyra Bridge over the Delaware River in Philadelphia, where the road continues south as New Jersey Route 73.
Pennsylvania Route 402 (PA 402) is a 29.24-mile (47.06 km) north–south state route in the Pennsylvania counties of Monroe and Pike. The southern terminus of the route is at U.S. Route 209 Business (US 209 Bus.) in the Smithfield Township village of Marshalls Creek .