List of National Historic Landmarks in Pennsylvania facts for kids
This is a List of National Historic Landmarks in Pennsylvania. There are 169 in the state. Listed in the tables below are the 102 NHLs outside Philadelphia. For the 67 within Philadelphia, see List of National Historic Landmarks in Philadelphia.
Three of these sites are shared with other states and are credited by the National Park Service as being located in those other states: the Delaware and Hudson Canal (centered in New York but extending into Pennsylvania); the Beginning Point of the U.S. Public Land Survey (on the Ohio–Pennsylvania border); and the Minisink Archeological Site, on the New Jersey-Pennsylvania border.
National Historic Landmarks in Pennsylvania (excluding Philadelphia)
Following are National Historic Landmarks in Pennsylvania, but outside Philadelphia. For consistency, the National Historic Landmark name is used to label each one.
Landmark name | Image | Date designated | Location | County | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1762 Waterworks |
(#72001142) |
Bethlehem 40°37′09″N 75°23′00″W / 40.619167°N 75.383333°W |
Northampton | The oldest municipal waterworks in the nation. | |
2 | Edward G. Acheson House |
(#76001679) |
Monongahela 908 Main Street 40°12′20″N 79°56′02″W / 40.205638°N 79.933776°W |
Washington | Home of self-taught inventor-engineer Edward G. Acheson, where in 1891 he invented carborundum. | |
3 | Allegheny County Courthouse and Jail |
(#73001586) |
Pittsburgh 436 Grant Street 40°26′18″N 79°59′46″W / 40.4384°N 79.9961°W |
Allegheny | Spectacular jail and courthouse designed by architect Henry Hobson Richardson in a Romanesque style. | |
4 | Allegheny Portage Railroad of the Pennsylvania Canal |
(#66000648) |
Johnstown 40°27′15″N 78°32′25″W / 40.454167°N 78.540278°W |
Blair | Railroad that transported canalboats over the Allegheny Mountains, between the eastern and western sections of the Pennsylvania Canal; regarded as a technological marvel. | |
5 | Andalusia |
(#66000649) |
Andalusia 40°03′43″N 74°57′30″W / 40.061944°N 74.958333°W |
Bucks | Greek Revival residence of Nicholas Biddle, head of the Second Bank of the United States. | |
6 | Henry Antes House |
(#75001657) |
Pottstown 40°17′25″N 75°32′26″W / 40.290321°N 75.540558°W |
Montgomery | Headquarters of George Washington, September 23 to 26, 1777. | |
7 | Augustus Lutheran Church |
(#67000019) |
Trappe 40°12′03″N 75°28′50″W / 40.200781°N 75.480545°W |
Montgomery | ||
8 | Bedford Springs Hotel Historic District |
(#84001413) |
Bedford 39°59′47″N 78°30′28″W / 39.996389°N 78.507778°W |
Bedford | ||
9 | Beginning Point of the U.S. Public Land Survey |
(#66000606) |
Ohioville, PA and East Liverpool, OH 40°38′26″N 80°31′10″W / 40.640487°N 80.519377°W |
Beaver, PA and Columbiana, OH | ||
10 | Beth Sholom Synagogue |
(#07000430) |
Elkins Park 8231 Old York Road 40°04′56″N 75°07′36″W / 40.082222°N 75.126667°W |
Montgomery | Frank Lloyd Wright designed it. The American Institute of Architects and National Trust for Historic Preservation commented upon it. | |
11 | Bomberger's Distillery |
(#75001649) |
Newmanstown 40°16′30″N 76°19′13″W / 40.275034°N 76.320199°W |
Lebanon | ||
12 | Bost Building |
(#99000627) |
Homestead 621–623 East 8th Avenue 40°24′33″N 79°54′16″W / 40.40912°N 79.90436°W |
Allegheny | Headquarters of the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers during the Homestead Strike. | |
13 | Braddock Carnegie Library |
(#73001585) |
Braddock 40°24′07″N 79°51′56″W / 40.401869°N 79.865425°W |
Allegheny | First Carnegie library built in the United States. | |
14 | David Bradford House |
(#73001668) |
Washington 175 South Main Street 40°10′06″N 80°14′41″W / 40.168201°N 80.244776°W |
Washington | A home of David Bradford. | |
15 | Brandywine Battlefield |
(#66000660) |
Chadds Ford 39°52′31″N 75°34′31″W / 39.875278°N 75.575278°W |
Delaware | Site of the 1777 Battle of Brandywine. | |
16 | William Brinton 1704 House |
(#67000018) |
Dilworthtown 39°53′40″N 75°33′40″W / 39.894424°N 75.560993°W |
Delaware | ||
17 | Bryn Athyn Historic District |
(#08001087) |
Bryn Athyn 40°08′04″N 75°03′48″W / 40.134444°N 75.063333°W |
Montgomery | ||
18 | James Buchanan House (Wheatland) |
(#66000669) |
Lancaster 40°02′37″N 76°19′45″W / 40.043584°N 76.329183°W |
Lancaster | Home of James Buchanan while he was President and in his final years. | |
19 | Pearl S. Buck House |
(#74001755) |
Perkasie 520 Dublin Road 40°21′36″N 75°13′11″W / 40.36°N 75.219722°W |
Bucks | A home of author Pearl S. Buck. | |
20 | Buckingham Friends Meeting House |
(#97000291) |
Buckingham Township 5684 Lower York Road 40°20′56″N 75°02′27″W / 40.348889°N 75.040833°W |
Bucks | Associated with the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). | |
21 | Bushy Run Battlefield |
(#66000696) |
Harrison City 2 miles E. of Harrison City on PA Route 993 40°21′19″N 79°37′12″W / 40.355278°N 79.62°W |
Westmoreland | Site of the Battle of Bushy Run during Pontiac's Rebellion. | |
22 | Cambria Iron Company |
(#89001101) |
Johnstown 40°20′10″N 78°55′23″W / 40.336°N 78.923°W |
Cambria | ||
23 | Simon Cameron House |
(#73001620) |
Harrisburg 219 South Front Street 40°15′23″N 76°52′45″W / 40.256523°N 76.879108°W |
Dauphin | A home of Simon Cameron who had some association under Abraham Lincoln. | |
24 | Carlisle Indian School |
(#66000658) |
Carlisle 40°12′32″N 77°10′41″W / 40.209°N 77.178°W |
Cumberland | Associated with Native American education. Athlete Jim Thorpe attended. | |
25 | Carrie Blast Furnaces 6 and 7 |
(#06001070) |
Rankin, Munhall, and Swissvale boroughs Northern side of the Monongahela River, 0.5 miles (0.80 km) west of the Rankin Bridge 40°24′47″N 79°53′24″W / 40.413081°N 79.89008°W |
Allegheny | The only 2 surviving pre-World War II blast furnaces in the Pittsburgh area. | |
26 | Cedarcroft |
(#71000693) |
Kennett Square 39°51′28″N 75°43′09″W / 39.857827°N 75.719175°W |
Chester | ||
27 | Chatham Village |
(#98001372) |
Pittsburgh Roughly bounded by Virginia Avenue, Bigham Street, Woodruff Street, Saw Mill Run Boulevard, and Olympia Road 40°25′52″N 80°01′01″W / 40.4311°N 80.0169°W |
Allegheny | ||
28 | Cornwall Iron Furnace |
(#66000671) |
Cornwall Rexmont Road & Boyd Street 40°16′14″N 76°24′22″W / 40.270556°N 76.406111°W |
Lebanon | ||
29 | Delaware Canal |
(#74001756) |
Easton to Bristol Easton to Bristol along the Delaware River 40°05′36″N 74°51′41″W / 40.093283°N 74.861456°W |
Bucks and Northampton |
Transported anthracite coal. | |
30 | Delaware and Hudson Canal |
(#68000051) |
Lackawaxen, PA, Honesdale, PA, Kingston, NY, Rosendale, NY, Ellenville, NY, and Port Jervis, NY 41°36′26″N 74°26′53″W / 41.607222°N 74.448056°W |
Pike, PA, Wayne, PA, Orange, NY, Sullivan, NY, and Ulster, NY | ||
31 | Drake Oil Well |
(#66000695) |
Titusville 41°36′39″N 79°39′28″W / 41.6108°N 79.65769°W |
Venango | Edwin L. Drake struck oil here, the site of the world's first successful oil well. | |
32 | East Broad Top Railroad |
(#66000666) |
Rockhill 40°14′29″N 77°53′56″W / 40.241389°N 77.898889°W |
Huntingdon | ||
33 | Dwight D. Eisenhower Farmstead |
(#67000017) |
Gettysburg 39°47′36″N 77°15′48″W / 39.793333°N 77.263333°W |
Adams | A home of Dwight Eisenhower. | |
34 | Emmanuel Episcopal Church |
(#74001737) |
Pittsburgh North and Allegheny Avenues 40°27′11″N 80°01′09″W / 40.45306°N 80.0192°W |
Allegheny | ||
35 | Ephrata Cloister |
(#67000026) |
Ephrata 40°10′59″N 76°11′21″W / 40.183056°N 76.189167°W |
Lancaster | ||
36 | Wharton Esherick House and Studio |
(#73001615) |
Malvern 40°05′02″N 75°29′38″W / 40.083808°N 75.493943°W |
Chester | Studio of Wharton Esherick who participated in the Arts and Crafts Movement. | |
37 | David Espy House |
(#74001750) |
Bedford 40°01′09″N 78°30′11″W / 40.019176°N 78.502980°W |
Bedford | Associated with Whiskey Rebellion and David Espy. | |
38 | Fallingwater |
(#74001781) |
Mill Run 39°54′17″N 79°28′05″W / 39.904808°N 79.468120°W |
Fayette | Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. | |
39 | Fonthill, Mercer Museum and Moravian Pottery and Tile Works |
(#85002366) |
Doylestown 40°19′23″N 75°07′25″W / 40.323056°N 75.123611°W |
Bucks | Three sites associated with Henry Chapman Mercer. | |
40 | Forks of the Ohio |
(#66000643) |
Pittsburgh Point Park 40°26′27″N 80°00′37″W / 40.4408°N 80.01028°W |
Allegheny | Associated with French and Indian War. | |
41 | Fulton Opera House |
(#69000156) |
Lancaster 12–14 North Prince Street 40°02′17″N 76°18′28″W / 40.038156°N 76.307877°W |
Lancaster | Named for Robert Fulton, it is one of the oldest continuously-operated theaters. | |
42 | Robert Fulton Birthplace |
(#66000670) |
Quarryville 8 miles south of Quarryville on U.S. Route 22 39°48′17″N 76°09′37″W / 39.804722°N 76.160278°W |
Lancaster | Also associated with Robert Fulton. | |
43 | Albert Gallatin House |
(#66000663) |
Point Marion 39°46′40″N 79°55′45″W / 39.777778°N 79.929168°W |
Fayette | A home of Albert Gallatin. | |
44 | Gemeinhaus-Lewis David de Schweinitz Residence |
(#75001658) |
Bethlehem 40°37′00″N 75°22′52″W / 40.616805°N 75.381147°W |
Northampton | A home of botanist Lewis David de Schweinitz. | |
45 | Graeme Park |
(#66000672) |
Horsham 40°13′00″N 75°09′00″W / 40.216667°N 75.15°W |
Montgomery | ||
46 | Grey Towers |
(#80003578) |
Glenside 40°04′46″N 75°09′54″W / 40.079554°N 75.165082°W |
Montgomery | Designed by Horace Trumbauer. Now part of Arcadia University. | |
47 | Gruber Wagon Works |
(#72001092) |
Reading 40°22′14″N 75°58′47″W / 40.3706°N 75.9796°W |
Berks | Located in what is now Tulpehocken Creek Park. | |
48 | Historic Moravian Bethlehem District |
(#12001016) |
Bethlehem 40°37′08″N 75°22′51″W / 40.618924°N 75.38076°W |
Northampton | ||
49 | I. N. and Bernardine Hagan House |
(#00000708) |
Chalk Hill 39°52′09″N 79°31′11″W / 39.869167°N 79.519722°W |
Fayette | A higher end Usonian house of those designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. | |
50 | Harmony Historic District |
(#73002139) |
Harmony 40°48′11″N 80°07′42″W / 40.803056°N 80.128333°W |
Butler | Associated with Harmony Society and George Rapp. | |
51 | Harrisburg Station and Trainshed |
(#75001638) |
Harrisburg 40°15′36″N 76°52′40″W / 40.260120°N 76.877761°W |
Dauphin | Pennsylvania Railroad station with sheds using truss system patented by Albert Fink. | |
52 | Milton S. Hershey Mansion |
(#78002388) |
Hershey Mansion Road 40°17′18″N 76°38′39″W / 40.288271°N 76.644087°W |
Dauphin | A home of Milton Snavely Hershey. | |
53 | Honey Hollow Watershed |
(#69000155) |
New Hope 40°22′26″N 75°00′27″W / 40.373889°N 75.0075°W |
Bucks | ||
54 | Horseshoe Curve |
(#66000647) |
Altoona 40°29′45″N 78°28′54″W / 40.495753°N 78.481696°W |
Blair | A horseshoe-shaped railroad track | |
55 | Keim Homestead |
(#100000832) |
Pike Township 40°24′35″N 75°44′54″W / 40.409722°N 75.748333°W |
Berks | ||
56 | Kennywood Park |
(#87000824) |
West Mifflin 4800 Kennywood Boulevard 40°23′15″N 79°51′48″W / 40.3875°N 79.8633°W |
Allegheny | From trolley park era, One of America's first amusement parks. | |
57 | Leap-The-Dips |
(#91000229) |
Altoona 700 Park Avenue 40°28′15″N 78°23′48″W / 40.470833°N 78.396667°W |
Blair | The oldest wooden rollercoaster still standing in the United States. | |
58 | F. Julius Lemoyne House |
(#97001271) |
Washington 49 East Maiden Street 40°10′05″N 80°14′35″W / 40.168064°N 80.243168°W |
Washington | A home of F. Julius LeMoyne, involved with the Underground Railroad | |
59 | Lightfoot Mill |
(#73001616) |
Chester Springs 40°04′53″N 75°38′40″W / 40.081389°N 75.644444°W |
Chester | See also Oliver Evans. | |
60 | Lukens Historic District |
(#94001186) |
Coatesville 50, 53, 76 & 102 South First Street 39°58′52″N 75°49′21″W / 39.981111°N 75.8225°W |
Chester | Associated with Rebecca Lukens and Brandywine Ironworks (later Lukens Steel Company). | |
61 | Humphry Marshall House |
(#87002596) |
Marshallton 1407 South Strasburg Road/PA Route 162 39°56′52″N 75°40′53″W / 39.947747°N 75.681474°W |
Chester | A home of Humphry Marshall. | |
62 | Meadowcroft Rockshelter |
(#78002480) |
West of Avella 40°17′11″N 80°29′30″W / 40.286389°N 80.491667°W |
Washington | Archaeological site associated with Native Americans. | |
63 | Isaac Meason House |
(#71000707) |
Mount Braddock 39°57′14″N 79°38′53″W / 39.953946°N 79.648189°W |
Fayette | A home of Isaac Meason. | |
64 | Merion Cricket Club |
(#87000759) |
Haverford 40°00′56″N 75°18′01″W / 40.015596°N 75.300360°W |
Montgomery | From when cricket competed with baseball for American attention. | |
65 | Merion Friends Meeting House |
(#98001194) |
Merion Station 40°00′32″N 75°15′11″W / 40.008786°N 75.252977°W |
Montgomery | ||
66 | Merion Golf Club |
(#89002085) |
Ardmore 39°59′36″N 75°19′35″W / 39.993333°N 75.326389°W |
Delaware | Associated with Bobby Jones, who won the Grand Slam of Golf here in 1930. Host of many U.S. Opens. | |
67 | Mill Grove |
(#72001138) |
Audubon 40°07′23″N 75°26′39″W / 40.123056°N 75.444167°W |
Montgomery | A home of John James Audubon. | |
68 | Minisink Archeological Site |
(#93000608) |
Bushkill 41°17′26″N 74°49′44″W / 41.2906°N 74.829°W |
Pike | Prehistoric native site; extends into New Jersey. | |
69 | George Nakashima Woodworker Complex |
(#08000782) |
Solebury Township 40°20′25″N 74°57′20″W / 40.3402°N 74.9556°W |
Bucks | Art studio and home of woodworker George Nakashima | |
70 | Oakmont Country Club |
(#84003090) |
Oakmont 40°31′33″N 79°49′36″W / 40.525758°N 79.826764°W |
Allegheny | Built 1903, one of the first top-caliber golf courses anywhere. | |
71 | Old Economy |
(#66000644) |
Ambridge 40°35′46″N 80°13′59″W / 40.596158°N 80.233001°W |
Beaver | Associated with Harmony Society and George Rapp. | |
72 | Old West, Dickinson College |
(#66000659) |
Carlisle 40°12′10″N 77°11′42″W / 40.2029°N 77.1951°W |
Cumberland | Designed by Benjamin H. Latrobe, part of Dickinson College which was founded by Benjamin Rush. James Buchanan, later president, lived here. | |
73 | Asa Packer Mansion |
(#74001765) |
Jim Thorpe 40°51′52″N 75°44′18″W / 40.864427°N 75.738389°W |
Carbon | Designed by Samuel Sloan, home of Asa Packer, founder of the Lehigh Valley Railroad and Lehigh University. | |
74 | Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex |
(#77001162) |
Harrisburg Bounded by 3rd and 7th, North and Walnut Streets 40°15′52″N 76°53′01″W / 40.264441°N 76.883624°W |
Dauphin | Includes the Pennsylvania State Capitol, North and South Office Buildings, Finance Building, Forum Building, State Street Bridge and Ryan Legislative Office Building. Originally listed with only the capitol, expanded in 2013 to encompass surrounding buildings. | |
75 | Gifford Pinchot House |
(#66000694) |
Milford 41°19′39″N 74°49′15″W / 41.3275°N 74.820833°W |
Pike | Home of Gifford Pinchot, first head of the U.S. Forest Service and two-time state governor. | |
76 | Terence V. Powderly House |
(#66000667) |
Scranton 41°25′06″N 75°40′29″W / 41.418413°N 75.674728°W |
Lackawanna | Longtime home of Terence Vincent Powderly, a Knights of Labor leader. | |
77 | Joseph Priestley House |
(#66000673) |
Northumberland 40°53′17″N 76°47′25″W / 40.888028°N 76.790359°W |
Northumberland | Stately home of chemist Joseph Priestley, who, disenchanted with England moved here in 1794 and continued his ground-breaking research. | |
78 | The Printzhof |
(#66000661) |
Essington 39°51′33″N 75°18′11″W / 39.859164°N 75.303151°W |
Delaware | A home of Johan Printz. | |
79 | Pulpit Rocks |
(#93001614) |
Huntingdon 40°31′09″N 78°02′43″W / 40.519167°N 78.045278°W |
Huntingdon | ||
80 | Matthew S. Quay House |
(#75001615) |
Beaver 40°41′38″N 80°18′12″W / 40.693766°N 80.303372°W |
Beaver | A home of Matthew Stanley Quay, a Republican National Chairman who was campaign manager for Benjamin Harrison's successful presidential campaign. | |
81 | St. Mark's Episcopal Church (Jim Thorpe) |
(#77001135) |
Jim Thorpe 40°51′47″N 75°44′18″W / 40.863018°N 75.738209°W |
Carbon | ||
82 | Searights Tollhouse, National Road |
(#66000665) |
Uniontown 39°56′43″N 79°47′40″W / 39.945285°N 79.794553°W |
Fayette | Tollhouses built in 1835 as part of the National Road. | |
83 | Schaeffer House |
(#11000630) |
Schaefferstown 40°17′47″N 76°18′01″W / 40.296297°N 76.300257°W |
Lebanon | Possibly the only remaining German Weinbauernhaus in America, combining a residence with the production of alcohol. | |
84 | Smithfield Street Bridge |
(#74001745) |
Pittsburgh Smithfield Street at the Monongahela River 40°26′05″N 80°00′08″W / 40.4347°N 80.0022°W |
Allegheny | A truss bridge built between 1881 and 1883. | |
85 | Staple Bend Tunnel |
(#94001187) |
Conemaugh Township 40°21′26″N 78°51′19″W / 40.357273°N 78.855303°W |
Cambria | The first railroad tunnel in the United States. Regarded as an engineering marvel. | |
86 | Stiegel-Coleman House |
(#66000668) |
Brickerville 40°14′16″N 76°17′48″W / 40.2378°N 76.2968°W |
Lancaster | House built in parts by owner William Stiegel and then by Robert Coleman. | |
87 | Summerseat |
(#71000685) |
Morrisville 40°12′27″N 74°46′44″W / 40.207449°N 74.778895°W |
Bucks | A home of George Clymer, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution. | |
88 | George Taylor House |
(#71000709) |
Catasauqua Lehigh & Poplar Streets 40°38′45″N 75°27′59″W / 40.64587°N 75.466398°W |
Lehigh | A home of George Taylor, a signer of the Declaration of Independence. | |
89 | M. Carey Thomas Library |
(#91002052) |
Bryn Mawr 40°01′37″N 75°18′50″W / 40.026821°N 75.313855°W |
Montgomery | An architecturally significant building on Bryn Mawr College campus. | |
90 | Union Canal Tunnel |
(#74001792) |
Lebanon Tunnel Hill Road 40°20′58″N 76°27′42″W / 40.349444°N 76.461667°W |
Lebanon | ||
91 | Valley Forge |
(#66000657) |
Valley Forge 40°05′49″N 75°26′20″W / 40.096944°N 75.438889°W |
Chester and Montgomery | ||
92 | Gen. Friedrich Von Steuben Headquarters |
(#72001108) |
Valley Forge National Historical Park 40°05′49″N 75°28′13″W / 40.096988°N 75.470278°W |
Chester | Headquarters of drillmaster Baron Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin von Steuben who had served Frederick the Great. Now part of Valley Forge National Historical Park. | |
93 | Washington's Crossing |
(#66000650) |
Yardley, PA and Titusville, NJ 40°17′51″N 74°52′35″W / 40.2975°N 74.876389°W |
Bucks, PA and Mercer County, NJ | Pennsylvania location of George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River leading up to the Battle of Trenton on December 26, 1776, includes Washington Crossing State Park in New Jersey | |
94 | Washington's Headquarters |
(#73001655) |
Valley Forge National Historical Park Valley Creek Road, near junction of PA Routes 252 & 23 40°05′58″N 75°27′43″W / 40.099490°N 75.461954°W |
Montgomery | Part of Valley Forge National Historical Park. | |
95 | Waynesborough |
(#73001603) |
Paoli 40°01′55″N 75°28′23″W / 40.031988°N 75.473145°W |
Chester | Home of General Anthony Wayne. | |
96 | Conrad Weiser House |
(#66000646) |
Womelsdorf 40°21′33″N 76°10′26″W / 40.359167°N 76.173889°W |
Berks | A home of Johann Conrad Weiser, who enlisted the Iroquois on the British side of the French and Indian War. | |
97 | Benjamin West Birthplace |
(#66000662) |
Swarthmore 39°54′18″N 75°21′05″W / 39.905095°N 75.351400°W |
Delaware | Birthplace of Benjamin West who supported artists including Gilbert Stuart and Charles Willson Peale. On campus of Swarthmore College. | |
98 | Woodmont |
(#98001192) |
Gladwyne 1622 Spring Mill Road 40°03′48″N 75°17′29″W / 40.0634°N 75.2915°W |
Montgomery | Designed by William Lightfoot Price for industrialist Alan Wood, Jr. Father Divine also lived here. | |
99 | Woodville |
(#74001733) |
Heidelberg South of Heidelberg on Pennsylvania Route 50 40°22′47″N 80°05′47″W / 40.3797°N 80.0964°W |
Allegheny | Home of John Neville, tax collector during the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794. | |
100 | Andrew Wyeth Studio and Kuerner Farm |
(#11000564) |
Chadds Ford Township 39°52′09″N 75°34′32″W / 39.8692°N 75.5756°W |
Delaware | The Kuerner Farm was the inspiration for more than 1,000 Wyeth paintings over a 64-year period. Listing expanded (and renamed) in 2014 to include the studio of Andrew Wyeth. | |
101 | N. C. Wyeth House and Studio |
(#97001680) |
Chadds Ford Township 39°51′59″N 75°35′09″W / 39.866342°N 75.585785°W |
Delaware | Home and studio of painter N.C. Wyeth and family. Managed by the Brandywine River Museum. | |
102 | W. A. Young and Sons Foundry and Machine Shop |
(#100000839) |
Rices Landing 39°56′59″N 79°59′57″W / 39.949679°N 79.999268°W |
Greene |
See also
- National Register of Historic Places listings in Pennsylvania
- List of National Historic Landmarks by state
- List of National Historic Sites in United States
- List of Pennsylvania state historical markers