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What
do quilting, hex signs, coal mines,
honeymoons, railroads, streudel,
history, mountains, covered bridges,
and rivers have in common?
Pennsylvania, of course! Settled in
1643,
Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania in Dauphin County
is the capital of
PA.
This
state saw the birth of the United
States in Philadelphia's
Independence Hall, and the cruel
sacrifices made to establish and
defend our new freedom at Valley
Forge. Pennsylvania is called the
Keystone State, as it was the center
colony of the original 13 colonies.
It was said that it held the
colonies together like the
"keystone" in a window or door arch.
Philadelphia was our state capital
during the Revolutionary War.
York was the first capital of
the United States, and
The Constitution of the United
States and
The American Declaration of
Independence were both written
in Pennsylvania.
Benjamin Franklin asked be
buried in PA.
The
Industrial Revolution affected the
entire civilized world and was
triggered in a small 500 mile area
in northeast PA. It was here that
anthracite coal was discovered by
men intelligent enough to develop a
process to use it (Jesse Fell of
Wilkes-Barre and David Thomas of the
Crane Iron Works in Catasauqua). 300
million year old plant matter has
turned into coal all over the world.
In northeastern Pennsylvania,
however, the coal is purer, harder,
and of higher carbon content than
other coal. Over 95 percent of the
Western Hemisphere is supplied with
coal from northeastern Pennsylvania.
Erie,
PA's harbor is home to the Flagship
Niagara, Commodore Perry's flagship
in a decisive battle in the War of
1812. Gettysburg, PA, was a turning
point in the "War Between the
States". A massacre for both sides,
the sobering loss of life is honored
in PA's solemn preservation of this
battlefield.
Lincoln's Gettysburg Address was
written in PA.
Pennsylvania
was the world's leader in developing
transportation technology in the
days when railroads were king and
the state has the world's best
collections of trains and
railroading equipment to prove it!
The Pennsylvania Railroad was once
the largest in the world, operating
7,000 locomotives and 250,000 cars.
The completion of the Horseshoe
Curve near Altoona, PA was a
significant engineering feat that
opened the United States for
Westward expansion. Pennsylvania was
the home to many railroading firsts.
Explore the
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum
Commission and
PA Railways.
Pennsylvania boasts 50 natural lakes
and 2,500 man-made lakes.
Pennsylvania is also the home of
numerous sports teams including the
Penn State University Nittany Lions
and professional teams such as the
Pittsburgh Pirates and Steelers; the
Philadelphia Phillies; 76ers and
Eagles and the Scranton Wilkes-Barre
Red Barons minor league baseball
team and Wilkes-Barre / Scranton
Penguins hockey team.
Links:
Camelback Resort
Covered Bridges
Lackawanna Coal Mine
Lehigh Valley Wine Trail
Marywood University
Montage Mountain
No. 9 Mine & Museum
Pioneer Tunnel Coal Mine
Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania
Shawnee Inn and Golf Resort
Steamtown, U.S.A
State
Bird: Ruffed Grouse

State Flower: Mountain Laurel
State Tree: Hemlock
State Animal: Whitetail Deer
State Fish: Brook Trout
State Dog: Great Dane
State Beverage: Milk
State Motto: Virtue, Liberty and
Independence
State Insect: Firefly
State Beautification Plant:
Crownvetch
State Electric Locomotive: GGI 4859
Electric Locomotive
State Steam Locomotive: K4s Steam
Locomotive
State Ship: United States Brig
Niagara
State Fossil: Phacops Rana
State Song: Pennsylvania
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