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      • The original inhabitants of the area were Capoose and Lenape Indian tribes, with white settlers arriving in the mid-18th century.
      scrantonpa.gov › our-community › work-from-here
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  2. A new name was given to the settlement in 1845: Harrison, in honor of the president. Finally, in 1851, the name was changed to Scranton. When the railroad arrived in 1853, it provided an outlet for the iron industry and the coal mines. The population rose to 9,000 by 1860. Scranton absorbed some of its suburbs in 1866 and was chartered as a city.

  3. 570 and 272. FIPS code. 42-69000. GNIS feature ID. 634293 [3] Website. www .scrantonpa .gov. Scranton is a city in and the county seat of Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, United States. With a population of 76,328 as of the 2020 U.S. census, [4] Scranton is the most populous city in Northeastern Pennsylvania and the Wyoming Valley metropolitan ...

  4. People from Pennsylvania are called "Pennsylvanians". The following is a list of notable Americans who were born in, or lived a significant portion of their lives in, Pennsylvania along with their primary Pennsylvania city or town of residence:

  5. Sep 26, 2023 · History of Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA Journey back in time to Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA (Lackawanna) Visit Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA. Discover its history. Learn about the people who lived there through stories, old newspaper articles, pictures, postcards and ancestry.

    • Who lived in Scranton Pennsylvania?1
    • Who lived in Scranton Pennsylvania?2
    • Who lived in Scranton Pennsylvania?3
    • Who lived in Scranton Pennsylvania?4
    • Who lived in Scranton Pennsylvania?5
    • Museum and Collection
    • Equipment
    • Demonstrations, Tours, and Excursions
    • History
    • Accidents and Incidents
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    Steamtown NHS is located within a working railroad yardand incorporates the surviving elements of the 1902 DL&W Scranton roundhouse and locomotive repair shops. The visitor center, theater, technology and history museums are built in the style of and on the site of the missing portions of the original roundhouse, giving an impression of what the or...

    Former units

    Several engines not part of the collection have visited the Scranton site: NYS&W #142, BM&R #425 (now Reading Blue Mountain and Northern 425), Lowville & Beaver River Shay #8, former RDG T-1 #2102 (restored and operable by Reading Blue Mountain and Northern), Milwaukee Road 261, PRR 1361 and NKP 765. "Peppersass" No.1 from Mount Washington Cog Railwayvisited the Steamtown Scranton site during Railfest 2016, and revisited again during March 11 to 13, 2019.

    Steamtown NHS offers a variety of demonstrations, tours, and excursions that demonstrate how railroads functioned in the age of steam. Park rangers give guided tours of the locomotive shop, where one can see work being done on the steam engines in the original roundhouse area; the Union Pacific Big Boylocomotive on display; and demonstrations of th...

    New England roots

    F. Nelson Blount, the heir to the largest seafood processor in the United States, was an avid railroad enthusiast. When he was 17, he wrote a book on steam power; later, he amassed one of the largest collections of vintage steam locomotives in the United States. By 1964, part of his collection — 25 steam locomotives from the United States and Canada, 10 other locomotives, and 25 pieces of rolling stock — was housed at North Walpole, New Hampshire. The Monadnock, Steamtown & Northern Railroad,...

    Move to Scranton

    Self-syndicated newspaper columnist Michael McManus once said that his goal in writing his weekly column was "to suggest answers to problems of the old industrial states." In March 1982 a substantial article by McManus appeared in the Bangor Daily News. In the article, McManus proposed several reasons why a city, like Chicago, Pittsburgh, or Scranton, might benefit from a tourist attraction like Steamtown. McManus went on to explain why the business was failing in Vermont: past failed managem...

    Nationalization

    In 1986, the U.S. House of Representatives, under the urging of Scranton native Representative Joseph M. McDade, voted to approve the spending of $8 million to study the collection and to establish the site as a National Historic Site (NHS). The National Park Service (NPS) consequently conducted historical research on the Steamtown Foundation's equipment in 1987 and 1988. This research was used for a Scope of Collections Statement for Steamtown NHS and was published in 1991 under the title St...

    On July 10, 1995, less than two weeks after the museum opened, two teen-aged boys were killed when they were struck by Steamtown's Canadian Pacific 2317, which was pulling a train with 575 passengers on an excursion trip to Moscow, Pennsylvania. The boys were hit while trying to remove their all-terrain vehicle which had gotten stuck on the tracks....

  6. The 33 individuals interviewed have either lived or worked in Scranton. They have strong ties to the city related to their childhood, racial or ethnic community, civic involvement, vocation, or faith group.

  7. Nov 30, 2023 · From Around the Web. Discover Steamtown National Historic Site in Scranton, Pennsylvania: The train collection of an eccentric New England seafood mogul is now a National Historical Site.

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