The
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ( ), often
colloquially referred to as PA (its postal
abbreviation, which succeeds the archaic Penn. and
Penna. as common abbreviations) by natives and
Northeasterners, is a state located in
the Northeastern and
Middle Atlantic regions of the
United
States
. The state borders Delaware
and Maryland
to the
south, West
Virginia
to the
southwest, Ohio
to the west,
New
York
and a water border with Ontario
to the
north, and New
Jersey
to the east. The state's four most populous cities are,
respectively, Philadelphia
, Pittsburgh
, Allentown
and Erie
.
The state
capital is Harrisburg
.
Pennsylvania has been known as the
Keystone State
since 1802, based in part upon its central location among the
original
Thirteen Colonies forming
the United States, and also in part because of the number of
important American documents signed in the state (such as the
Declaration of
Independence). It was also a keystone state economically,
having both the industry common to the
North (making such wares as
Conestoga wagons and
rifles) and the agriculture common to the
South (producing feed, fiber,
food, and
tobacco).
Another one of Pennsylvania's nicknames is the
Quaker State;
in colonial times, it was known officially as the
Quaker Province, in
recognition of Quaker
William Penn's
First Frame of
Government constitution for
Pennsylvania that guaranteed
liberty of
conscience. He knew of the hostility Quakers
faced when they opposed religious ritual, taking oaths, violence,
war and military service, and what they viewed as ostentatious
frippery.
Pennsylvania has of coastline along Lake Erie
and of shoreline along the Delaware Estuary.
Geography

Counties of Pennsylvania

Map of Pennsylvania, showing major
cities and roads
Pennsylvania is north to south and east to west. Of a total , are
land, are inland waters and are waters in Lake Erie. It is the
33rd largest state in
the United States.
The bounds
of the state are the Mason-Dixon Line
(39° 43' N) to the south, the Delaware River to the east, 80° 31' W to the
west, and the 42° N to the
north, with the exception of a short segment on the western end,
where a triangle extends north to Lake Erie. Pennsylvania borders
six other states: New
York
to the north; New Jersey
to the east; Delaware
and Maryland
to the
southeast; West
Virginia
to the
southwest, and Ohio
to the
west. Pennsylvania also shares a water border with
Canada
.
It has the
cities of Philadelphia, York, Reading
and Lancaster
in the southeast, Pittsburgh
in the southwest, the tri-cities of Allentown
, Bethlehem
, and Easton
in the central east, Scranton
and Wilkes-Barre
in the northeast, and Erie
in the northwest, with state capital Harrisburg
on the Susquehanna River in the central region of
the commonwealth.
Climate
Pennsylvania's diverse topography also produces a variety of
climates. Straddling two major zones, the majority of the state
with the exception of the southeastern corner has a
humid continental climate.
Greater
Philadelphia
has some characteristics of the humid subtropical climate that
covers much of Delaware
and Maryland
to the south. Moving toward the mountainous
interior of the state, the climate becomes markedly colder, the
number of cloudy days increases, and winter snowfall amounts are
greater.
Western areas of the state, particularly
cities near Lake
Erie
, can receive over 100 inches (254 cm) of
snowfall annually, and the entire state receives plentiful rainfall
throughout the year. The state does get severe weather from
spring through summer into fall, an average of 10 tornadoes
touchdown each year in the state.
| Monthly
Normal High and Low Temperatures For Various Pennsylvania Cities in
Fahrenheit |
|
City |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Scranton |
34/18 |
37/20 |
47/28 |
59/38 |
71/48 |
78/57 |
83/61 |
81/60 |
72/53 |
61/42 |
49/34 |
39/24 |
|
Erie |
33/20 |
36/21 |
45/28 |
56/38 |
67/49 |
76/59 |
80/64 |
79/63 |
72/56 |
61/46 |
49/36 |
39/27 |
|
Pittsburgh |
37/20 |
39/21 |
50/29 |
62/38 |
71/48 |
80/56 |
85/62 |
83/60 |
76/53 |
64/41 |
53/33 |
42/25 |
|
Harrisburg |
38/23 |
41/25 |
51/33 |
63/42 |
73/51 |
81/61 |
86/66 |
84/64 |
76/57 |
64/45 |
53/36 |
42/28 |
|
Philadelphia |
39/25 |
42/28 |
51/35 |
62/44 |
72/55 |
81/64 |
86/70 |
84/69 |
77/61 |
66/49 |
55/40 |
44/31 |
|
Allentown |
35/19 |
39/21 |
49/29 |
60/38 |
71/48 |
79/58 |
84/63 |
82/61 |
74/53 |
63/41 |
51/33 |
40/24 |
| East
Stroudsburg |
35/16 |
39/17 |
49/26 |
61/36 |
72/46 |
80/55 |
85/59 |
83/58 |
75/50 |
64/38 |
51/30 |
40/22 |
| Philadelphia, Scranton, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, Erie, Allentown, East Stroudsburg |
History
Before the Commonwealth was settled by Europeans, the area was home
to the
Delaware (also known as Lenni Lenape),
Susquehannock,
Iroquois,
Eriez,
Shawnee, and other
Native American
tribes. Both the
Dutch and the
English claimed both sides of the
Delaware River as part of their colonial lands in America. The
Dutch were the first to take possession, and this has impact on the
history of Pennsylvania.
By June 3, 1631, the Dutch had started up
the DelMarVa Peninsula by establishing the Zwaanendael Colony on the site of present
day Lewes,
Delaware
.
In 1638,
Sweden
heated up
the issue by establishing the New Sweden
Colony, centered on Fort Christina
, on the site of present day Wilmington,
Delaware
. New Sweden claimed and, for the most part,
controlled the lower Delaware River region (Parts of present
Delaware, New Jersey and Pennsylvania), but settled few colonists
there.
On March 12, 1664,
King Charles II
of England gave
James, Duke of
York a Grant that included all of the lands included in the
original Virginia Company of Plymouth Grant as well as other lands.
This grant was – again – in conflict with the Dutch claim for
New Netherland, which included parts
of today’s Pennsylvania.
On June
24, 1664, The Duke of York sold the portion of his large grant that
included present day New
Jersey
to John Berkeley and
George Carteret for a proprietary
colony. As of yet, the land was not in English possession,
but the sale boxed in the portion of
New
Netherland on the West side of the
Delaware River. The English conquest of
New Netherland was commenced on
August 29, 1664, when
New Amsterdam
was coerced to surrender facing the cannons on English ships in New
York Harbor.
This conquest continued, and was completed
in October of 1664, when the English captured Fort Casimir in what today is New Castle,
Delaware
.
The Peace
of Breda between England
, France
and the Netherlands
confirmed the English conquest on July 21, 1667,
although there were temporary reversions.
On
September 12, 1672, as part of the Third Anglo—Dutch War, the
Dutch
re-conquered
New York Colony/New Amsterdam, the Dutch established three
County Courts which went on to become original Counties in present
day Delaware
and Pennsylvania. The one that later
transferred to Pennsylvania was Upland. This was partially reversed
on February 9, 1674, when the
Treaty of Westminster ended the
Third Anglo-Dutch War, and reverted all political situations to the
Status Quo Ante Bellum. The English
retained the Dutch Counties with their Dutch names.
By June 11, 1674,
New
York
reasserted control over the outlying colonies,
including Upland, but the names started to be changed to English
names by November 11, 1674. Upland was partitioned on
November 12, 1674, producing the general outline of the current
border between Pennsylvania and Delaware.
On February 28, 1681,
Charles
II granted a land charter to
William
Penn to repay a debt of £16,000 (around £2,100,000 in 2008,
adjusting for retail inflation) owed to William's father,
Admiral Penn.
This was one of the largest land grants to an individual in
history. It was called Pennsylvania, meaning "Penn's Woods", in
honor of Admiral Penn. William Penn, who had wanted his province to
be named "Sylvania", was embarrassed at the change, fearing that
people would think he had named it after himself, but King Charles
would not rename the grant. Penn established a government with two
innovations that were much copied in the New World: the county
commission and freedom of religious conviction.
What had
been Upland on what became the Pennsylvania side of the
Pennsylvania-Delaware
Border was renamed as Chester
County
when Pennsylvania instituted their colonial
governments on March 4, 1681.
Between 1730 and when it was shut down by Parliament with the
Currency Act of 1764, the Pennsylvania Colony made its own paper
money to account for the shortage of actual gold and silver. The
paper money was called
Colonial
Scrip. The Colony issued "bills of credit", which were as good
as gold or silver coins because of their legal tender status. Since
they were issued by the government and not a banking institution,
it was an interest-free proposition, largely defraying the expense
of the government and therefore taxation of the people. It also
promoted general employment and prosperity, since the Government
used discretion and did not issue too much to inflate the currency.
Benjamin Franklin had a hand in
creating this currency, of which he said its utility was never to
be disputed, and it also met with the "cautious approval" of
Adam Smith.
After the
Stamp Act Congress of 1765,
Delegate John Dickinson of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
, wrote the Declaration of Rights and
Grievances. The Congress was the first meeting of the
thirteen colonies, called at the
request of the Massachusetts
Assembly, but only nine colonies sent
delegates. Dickinson then wrote
Letters from a Farmer in
Pennsylvania, To the Inhabitants of the British Colonies,
which were published in the Pennsylvania Chronicle between December
2, 1767, and February 15, 1768.
When the
Founding
Fathers of the United States convened in Philadelphia in 1774,
12 colonies sent representatives to the
First Continental Congress.
The
Second Continental
Congress, which also met in Philadelphia (in May, 1775), drew
up and signed the Declaration of
Independence in Philadelphia, but when that city was captured
by the British, the Continental Congress escaped westward, meeting
at the Lancaster
courthouse on Saturday, September 27, 1777, and
then to York
. There they drew up the
Articles of Confederation that
formed 13 independent colonies into a new nation. Later, the
Constitution was written,
and Philadelphia was once again chosen to be cradle to the new
American Nation.
Pennsylvania became the second state to ratify the
U.S. Constitution on December 12, 1787, five
days after Delaware
became the first.
The "Redbrick Capitol", used from 1821 until it burned down in
1897
Dickinson
College
of Carlisle
was the first college founded in the United
States. Established in 1773, the college was ratified five
days after the
Treaty of
Paris on September 9, 1783. The school was founded by
Benjamin Rush and named after John
Dickinson.
For half a century, the Commonwealth's legislature met at various
places in the general Philadelphia area before starting to meet
regularly in Independence Hall in Philadelphia for 63 years. But it
needed a more central location, as for example the
Paxton Boys massacres of 1763 had made the
legislature aware.
So, in 1799 the legislature moved to the
Lancaster
Courthouse, and finally in 1812 to Harrisburg
. The legislature met in the old Dauphin
County
Court House until December 1821, when the
Redbrick Capitol was finished. It burned down in
1897, presumably because of a faulty
flue. The
legislature met at Grace Methodist Church on State Street (still
standing) until the present capitol was finished in 1907.
The
new state
Capitol
drew rave reviews. Its dome was inspired
by the domes of St. Peter's Basilica
in Rome
and the
United States Capitol. President Theodore Roosevelt called it the "the
most beautiful state Capitol in the nation" and said, "It's the
handsomest building I ever saw" at the dedication. In 1989, the
New York Times praised it as
"grand, even awesome at moments, but it is also a working building,
accessible to citizens ... a building that connects with the
reality of daily life".
Pennsylvania accounts for nine percent of all wooded areas in the
United States.
In 1923 President Calvin Coolidge established the Allegheny
National Forest
under the authority of the Weeks Act of 1911 in the northwest part of the
state in Elk, Forest, McKean, and Warren Counties for the purposes
of timber production and watershed protection in the Allegheny River basin. The Allegheny
is the state's only national forest.
James Buchanan, of Franklin
County
, was the only bachelor
President of the United
States and the only one to be born in Pennsylvania.
The
Battle of
Gettysburg
—-the major turning point of the Civil War—took
place near Gettysburg
. An estimated 350,000 Pennsylvanians served
in the
Union Army forces along with 8,600
African American military volunteers.
Pennsylvania was also the home of the first commercially drilled
oil well.
In 1859, near Titusville,
Pennsylvania
, Edwin L.
Drake successfully drilled the well,
which led to the first major oil boom in United States
history.
Demographics
The
center of population of
Pennsylvania is located in Perry County
, in the borough of Duncannon
.

Populations from 1790 to 2000
As of 2006, Pennsylvania has an estimated population of 12,440,621,
which is an increase of 35,273 from the previous year, and an
increase of 159,567 since the year 2000. Net
migration from other states resulted in a
decrease of 27,718, and
immigration from other
countries resulted in an increase of 126,007. Net migration to the
Commonwealth was 98,289. Migration of native Pennsylvanians
resulted in a decrease of 100,000 people. In 2006, 5.00% of
Pennsylvanians were foreign born (621,480 people). The state has an
estimated 2005 poverty rate of 11.9%. The state also has the 3rd
highest proportion of
elderly (65+) citizens
in 2005.
Foreign-born Pennsylvanians are largely from Asia (36.0%), Europe
(35.9%),
Latin America (30.6%), Africa
(5%), North America (3.1%), and Oceania (0.4%).
Pennsylvania's reported population of Hispanics, especially among
the Asian, Hawaiian and White races, has markedly increased in
recent years.
The Hispanic population is greatest in
Allentown
, Lancaster
, Reading
and around Philadelphia
, with over 20% being Hispanic. It is not
clear how much of this change reflects a changing population and
how much reflects increased willingness to self-identify minority
status.
Pennsylvania's population was reported as 5.9% under 5 and 23.8%
under 18, with 15.6% aged 65 or older. Females made up 51.7% of the
population.
The five largest ancestry groups self-reported in Pennsylvania are:
German (27.66%),
Irish (17.66%),
Italian (12.82%),
English (8.89%) and
Polish (7.23%).
A rapid growth in population is occurring in the Lower Susquehanna
Valley of Pennsylvania (Particularly Lancaster, York, Gettysburg,
and Harrisburg). Most residents are natives of Baltimore,
Pittsburgh, or Philadelphia or have jobs in those cities. The
population in this region already exceeds two million.

Pennsylvania Population
Distribution
Religion
Of all
the colonies, only in Rhode Island
was religious freedom as secure as in Pennsylvania,
and one result was an incredible religious diversity, one which continues to this
day.
Pennsylvania's population in 2000 was 12,281,054. Of these,
8,448,193 were estimated to belong to some sort of organized
religion.
According to the Association of religion
data archives at Pennsylvania State University
, reliable data exists for 7,116,348 religious
adherents in Pennsylvania in 2000 following 115 different
faiths. Their affiliations, including percentage of all
adherents, were:
Pennsylvania is also noted for having the highest concentration of
Amish in the United States.
While Pennsylvania owes its existence to
Quakers and many of the older trappings of the
Commonwealth are rooted in the teachings of the
Religious Society of Friends
(as they are officially known), practicing Quakers are a small
minority today.
Pennsylvania Dutch
The term "Dutch," when referring to the
Pennsylvania Dutch, means "German" or
"Teutonic" rather than "Netherlander." Germans, in their own
language, call themselves "Deutsch," which in English became,
misleadingly, "Dutch." The
Pennsylvania Dutch language is
a descendant of German, in the
West
Central German dialect family. Although it is still spoken as a
first language among some Old Order Amish and Mennonites
(principally in the Lancaster County area), the language is almost
extinct as an everyday language among the non-religious, though a
few words have passed into English usage.
Economy

Pennsylvania's 2008 total
gross state product (GSP) of $553.3
billion ranks the state 6th in the nation. If Pennsylvania were an
independent country, its economy would rank as the 18th largest in
the world. On a per-capita basis, Pennsylvania's per-capita GSP of
$35,641 ranks 26th among the 50 states.
Philadelphia
in the southeast corner, Pittsburgh
in the southwest corner, Erie
in the
northwest corner, Scranton-Wilkes-Barre in the northeast
corner, and Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton in the
east central region are urban manufacturing centers. Much of
the Commonwealth is rural; this dichotomy affects state politics as
well as the state economy.
Philadelphia is home to six Fortune 500
companies, with more located in suburbs like King of
Prussia
; it's a leader in the financial and insurance
industry. Pittsburgh is home to eight Fortune 500 companies,
including
U.S. Steel,
PPG
Industries, and
H.J. Heinz. In all, Pennsylvania is home to fifty
Fortune 500 companies.
As in the
US as a whole and in most states, the largest private employer in
the Commonwealth is Wal-Mart
, followed by the University
of Pennsylvania
, United Parcel Service
and Giant Food (called
Stop and Shop in other states).
The largest manufacturing employer is
Merck & Co..
Banking
The first nationally chartered
bank in the
United States, the
Bank of North
America, was founded in 1781 in Philadelphia. After a series of
mergers, the Bank of North America is part of
Wachovia, which uses national charter 1. It is not
known if the Bank of North America's charter will be retained after
March 2010 when
Wells Fargo, which
acquired Wachovia in 2008, consolidates its own charter and
Wachovia's under the name Wells Fargo, N.A.
Pennsylvania is also the home to the first nationally-chartered
bank under the 1863
National
Banking Act. That year, the Pittsburgh Savings & Trust
Company received a national charter and renamed itself the
First National Bank of Pittsburgh as
part of the National Banking Act. That bank is still in existence
today as
PNC Financial
Services, and remains based in Pittsburgh. PNC is the state's
largest bank, and the fifth-largest in the United States.
Agriculture
Pennsylvania ranks 19th overall in agricultural production, but 1st
in
mushrooms, 3rd in
Christmas trees and
layer chickens, 4th in
nursery and
sod,
milk,
corn for
silage,
grapes grown (including
juice grapes), and
horses production. It also ranks 8th in the nation in
Winemaking.
Gambling
Casino gambling was recently legalized in Pennsylvania. Currently,
there are 9 casinos across the state with 3 under construction or
in planning. Only horse racing, slot machines, and electronic table
games are legal in Pennsylvania, although a bill to legalize table
games was being negotiated in the fall of 2009. Sports betting is
illegal.
Governor Ed Rendell has considered legalizing slot machines in bars
and private clubs, since an estimated 17,000 operate illegally
across the state. Under this plan, any establishment with a liquor
license would be allowed up to 5 machines. All machines would be
connected to the state's computer system, like commercial casinos.
When someone wins on these machines, the state takes 50% and the
player 50%. West Virginia legalized video poker in bars and taverns
in 2001 and it is run by the state's lottery.
Politics
Government
Pennsylvania has had five
constitution during its statehood:
1776, 1790, 1838, 1874, and
1968. Prior to that, the province of Pennsylvania was
governed for a century by a
Frame of
Government, of which there were four versions: 1682, 1683,
1696, and 1701.
The capital of Pennsylvania is Harrisburg
. The legislature meets in the State Capitol
there.
Governor
The current
Governor
is
Ed Rendell, a former head of the
Democratic National
Committee who began as a
District
Attorney and
mayor in Philadelphia. The
other elected officials composing the executive branch are the
Lieutenant
Governor Joseph Scarnati,
Attorney General
Tom Corbett, Auditor
General
Jack Wagner, and
State Treasurer
Robert McCord.
General Assembly
Pennsylvania has a
bicameral
legislature set up by Commonwealth's constitution in 1790. The
original Frame of Government of William Penn had a unicameral
legislature. The
General
Assembly includes 50
Senators and 203
Representatives.
Joseph B. Scarnati III is currently
President Pro Tempore of the State
Senate,
Dominic Pileggi the
Majority Leader, and
Robert J. Mellow the
Minority Leader.
Keith R. McCall is
Speaker of the House of Representatives,
with
Todd A. Eachus as Majority Leader and
Samuel Smith as Minority
Leader. As of the 2008 elections, the Democrats have a narrow
majority in the state house and the Republicans retain their lead
in the state senate.
Judiciary
Pennsylvania is divided into 60 judicial
districts, most of which (except Philadelphia
) have magisterial district judges (formerly called
district justices and justices of the peace), who preside mainly
over preliminary hearings in felony and misdemeanor offenses, all
minor (summary) criminal offenses, and small civil claims.
Most criminal and civil cases originate in the Courts of Common
Pleas, which also serve as
appellate
courts to the district judges and for local agency decisions.
The
Superior Court
hears all appeals from the Courts of Common Pleas not expressly
designated to the
Commonwealth Court or
Supreme Court. It also has
original jurisdiction to review
warrant for
wiretap surveillance. The Commonwealth
Court is limited to appeals from final orders of certain state
agencies and certain designated cases from the Courts of Common
Pleas.
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
is the final appellate court. All judges in
Pennsylvania are elected; the
chief
justice is determined by seniority.
Taxation
Sales tax provides 39% of Commonwealth's
revenue;
personal income tax 34%;
motor vehicle taxes about 12%, and taxes on
cigarettes and alcohol beverage
5%.
Counties, municipalities, and
school
districts levy taxes on real estate. In addition, some local
bodies assess a
wage tax on personal
income. Generally, the total wage tax rate is capped at 1% of
income but some municipalities with
home
rule charters may charge more than 1%. Thirty-two of the
Commonwealth's sixty-seven counties levy a
personal property tax on stocks, bonds, and
similar holdings.
Representation in the 111th Congress
Pennsylvania's two
U.S.
Senators in the
111th Congress are
Arlen Specter and
Bob Casey, Jr.
Pennsylvania's
U.S. Representatives for the term beginning
January 2009 are
Robert Brady (
1st),
Chaka Fattah (
2nd),
Kathy Dahlkemper (
3rd),
Jason Altmire (
4th),
Glenn "G.T." Thompson (
5th),
Jim Gerlach (
6th),
Joe Sestak (
7th),
Patrick Murphy (
8th),
Bill Shuster (
9th),
Chris Carney (
10th),
Paul E. Kanjorski (
11th),
John Murtha (
12th),
Allyson Schwartz (
13th),
Michael F. Doyle (
14th),
Charlie Dent (
15th),
Joe Pitts (
16th),
Tim Holden (
17th),
Tim Murphy (
18th), and
Todd Russell Platts (
19th).
See
map of congressional districts
Regional strength
In the past decade, no
political
party has been clearly dominant in Pennsylvania. This, combined
with Pennsylvania's rank of 6th in the country in population, has
made it one of the most important
swing
states.
Democrats are strong in Philadelphia
County
, Montgomery
County, Delaware County,
Alleghany County, Lehigh County, Northampton County, Luzerne County,and Erie County. Republicans are strong in
Lancaster County,
York County,
Franklin
County,
Westmoreland County,
Butler County,
Blair County,
Lycoming County,and
Cumberland County.
Swing counties in the
state include Bucks
County
, Chester County,
Berks County, Lackawanna County, Dauphin County, Cambria County, Beaver County, and Mercer County.
Since 1992, Pennsylvania has been trending Democratic in
Presidential elections, voting for Bill Clinton twice by large
margins, and slightly closer in 2000 for Al Gore. In the 2004
Presidential Election, Senator
John F.
Kerry beat President
George W.
Bush in Pennsylvania 2,938,095
(50.92%) to 2,793,847 (48.42%). Most recently, in the
2008 Presidential
Election, Democrat
Barack Obama
defeated Republican
John McCain in
Pennsylvania, 3,184,778 (54%) to 2,584,088 (44%). The state holds
21
electoral votes.
Cities and municipalities
- For lists of cities in Pennsylvania, see List of cities in
Pennsylvania .
Municipalities in Pennsylvania are incorporated as
cities of several classes, as
boroughs, as
townships of several classes, or
under home rule charters. A "village," often identified by a
roadside sign, is unincorporated, and is merely a locale without
distinct boundaries. There are 2,567 municipalities in the
state.
There is some confusion about the number of "towns" in
Pennsylvania.
In 1870 Bloomsburg
, the county seat of Columbia
County
, was incorporated as a town and is recognized by
state government publications as "the only incorporated town" in
Pennsylvania. However, in 1975 McCandless
Township
, in Allegheny County
adopted a home rule charter under the name "Town of
McCandless".
Ten most populous municipalities
The ten most populous municipalities in Pennsylvania, according to
the 2006-2008 Community Survey, are:
- Philadelphia
(1,448,911)
- Pittsburgh
(295,988)
- Allentown
(111,025)
- Erie
(99,965)
- Upper Darby
Township
(82,159)
- Reading
(80,888)
- Scranton
(72,026)
- Bethlehem
(71,608)
- Lancaster
(56,116)
- Altoona
(46,756)
Ten most populous metropolitan areas
The ten most populous metropolitan areas are:
- Delaware
Valley (Philadelphia
) (5,838,471)
- Pittsburgh metropolitan area
(Pittsburgh
) (2,351,192)
- Lehigh Valley
(Allentown
) (808,210)
- Scranton
-Wilkes-Barre
(549,621)
- Harrisburg
-Carlisle
-Lebanon
(517,468)
- Lancaster metropolitan area
(502,370)
- York
-Hanover
(424,583)
- Reading
(403,595)
- The Poconos
(East
Stroudsburg
-Stroudsburg
) (340,300)
- Erie
(279,175)
Education
Pennsylvania has 501 public school districts, thousands of private
schools, publicly funded colleges and universities, and over 100
private institutions of higher education.
Primary and Secondary Education
In general, under state law, school attendance in Pennsylvania is
mandatory for a child from the age of 8 until the age of 17, or
until graduation from an accredited high school, whichever is
earlier. As of 2005, 83.8% of Pennsylvania residents age 18 to 24
have completed high school. Among residents age 25 and over, 86.7%
have graduated high school. Additionally, 25.7% have gone on to
obtain a bachelor’s degree or higher. State students consistently
do well in standardized testing. In 2007, Pennsylvania ranked 14th
in mathematics, 12th in reading, and 10th in writing for 8th grade
students.
In 1988, the Pennsylvania General Assembly passed Act 169, which
allows parents or guardians to homeschool their children as an
option for compulsory school attendance. This law specifies the
requirements and responsibilities of the parents and the school
district where the family lives.
Higher Education
See Also: List of
colleges and universities in Pennsylvania
There are dozens of colleges and universities throughout the state.
Four are members of the
Association of American
Universities, an invitation only organization of leading
research universities.
These are the University
of Pennsylvania
, Pennsylvania State University
, the University of Pittsburgh
, and Carnegie Mellon University
.
Recreation
Pennsylvania is home to the nation's first
zoo, the Philadelphia
Zoo
. Other long-accredited AZA zoos include the
Erie
Zoo
and the Pittsburgh
Zoo & PPG Aquarium
. The Lehigh
Valley Zoo and ZOOAMERICA
are other notable zoos. The Commonwealth
boasts some of the finest museums in the country, including the
Carnegie Museums in Pittsburgh, the
Philadelphia
Museum of Art
, and several others.
One
unique museum is the Houdini Museum
in Scranton, the only building in the world devoted
to the legendary magician. Pennsylvania is also home to the National
Aviary
, located in Pittsburgh.
All 121
state parks
in Pennsylvania feature free admission.
Pennsylvania offers a number of notable
amusement parks, including Camel Beach, Conneaut
Lake Park
, Dorney Park & Wildwater
Kingdom
, Dutch
Wonderland
, DelGrosso Amusement Park
, Hersheypark
, Idlewild
Park
, Kennywood
, Knoebels
, Lakemont
Park
, Sandcastle Waterpark
, Sesame
Place
, Great Wolf Lodge
and Waldameer
Park
. Pennsylvania also is home to the largest
indoor waterpark resort on the East Coast, Splash Lagoon
in Erie.
There are also notable music festivals that take place in
Pennsylvania.
These include Musikfest and NEARfest in
Bethlehem
, the Philadelphia Folk Festival,
Creation
Festival
, the Greater Allentown Fair and Purple Door.
There are nearly one million licensed hunters in Pennsylvania.
Whitetail deer, cottontail rabbits, squirrel, turkey, and grouse
are common game species. Pennsylvania is considered one of the
finest wild turkey hunting states in the Union, alongside Texas and
Alabama. Sport hunting in Pennsylvania provides a massive boost for
the Commonwealth's economy. A report from The Center for Rural
Pennsylvania (a Legislative Agency of the Pennsylvania General
Assembly) reported that hunting, fishing, and furtaking generated a
total of $9.6 billion statewide.
The
Boone and Crockett Club
shows that five of the ten largest (skull size)
black bear entries came from the state.
The state
also has a tied record for the largest hunter
shot black bear in the Boone & Crockett books at and a skull of 23 3/16 tied with a bear shot in California
in 1993. The largest bear ever found dead was in
Utah
in 1975, and the second largest was shot by a
poacher in the state in 1987.
Pennsylvania holds the second highest number
of Boone & Crockett-recorded record black bears at 183, second
only to Wisconsin
's 299.
Transportation
There are 69
railroads in the state
and of railways, 5th highest in the nation. There are
134 public-use airports and
six international airports.The International Airports in the state
are:
The
Port of Erie is the state's only
Great Lakes port and provides access to the St. Lawrence Seaway. It
boasts some of the finest port facilities on the Great Lakes.
The port
of Pittsburgh
is the second largest inland port in the United
States. There are of
highways in the
state.
SEPTA, based in Philadelphia, is the
fifth largest transportation agency in the United States. The
Port Authority of
Allegheny County, which services Pittsburgh, is the 12th
largest transportation agency in the United States.
The state has an extensive network of Interstate highways.
Interstate 80 runs from the Ohio
line in the
west to the New
Jersey
state line at the Delaware Water Gap
in the east. The road is toll-free
and crosses mostly rural and suburban areas, running far to the
South of cities such as Scranton
, Wilkes-Barre
, and Williamsport
. The
Pennsylvania Turnpike consists of
several routes crossing the state, including
Interstate 76/
Interstate 276 (which runs from the Ohio
border north of Pittsburgh to the New Jersey state line north of
Philadelphia) and
Interstate 476, the
Northeast Extension, which runs from the mainline in the
Philadelphia metro area to Scranton in the North.
Interstate 90 runs through Erie
County
in extreme Northwest Pennsylvania, connecting Ohio
with New York. Interstate
86 connects with Interstate 90 in Erie County.
Sports
Pennsylvania is home to many professional sports teams, including
the
Philadelphia Phillies and
Pittsburgh Pirates of
Major League Baseball, the
Philadelphia Eagles and
Pittsburgh Steelers of the
National Football League, the
Philadelphia 76ers of the
National Basketball
Association, the
Philadelphia
Union of
Major League
Soccer, the
Erie Bayhawks of the
National
Basketball Association Development League, the
Philadelphia Flyers and
Pittsburgh Penguins of the
National Hockey League, and the
Philadelphia Soul of the
Arena Football League. Among them,
these teams have accumulated 7
World
Series Championships (Pirates 5, Phillies 2), 16
National League Pennants, 3 pre-
Super Bowl era NFL Championships (Eagles), 6
Super Bowl Championships (Steelers), 1 Arena Bowl Championship
(Soul), 2 NBA Championships (76ers), and 5
Stanley Cup winners (Flyers 2, Penguins
3).
There are many minor league baseball teams located throughout the
state; several of these teams are associated with either the
Phillies or the Pirates.
In 2008, the Phillies moved their AAA-level
team from Ottawa,
Ontario
, in Canada, to a newly-constructed stadium,
Coca-Cola
Park
in Allentown
. The Lehigh Valley is a core fan base for
both the Phillies and the Philadelphia Eagles, who conduct their
pre-season training camp on the practice fields of Lehigh
University
. Therefore, expectations are that the new
team, called the
Lehigh Valley
IronPigs (after
pig iron, an
instrumental part in the construction of
steel
which has been a large part of the local economy for decades), is
likely to prove popular among Allentown and Lehigh Valley Phillies
fans.
The
Phillies' AA team, also called the Phillies, is located in Reading
, while the short-season A-level affiliate, called
the Crosscutters, is
located in Williamsport
.The Pirates' AA team, the Curve, is located in Altoona
. The short-season A-level affiliate, the
State College Spikes, is
located in State College
. The Spikes share a stadium with the Penn State
University
baseball team.Other Major League Baseball
teams have a presence in the state as well.
The New York Yankees' AAA team, also called the
Yankees, is located in
Moosic
, between Scranton
and Wilkes-Barre
in the northeastern part of the state.
The
Detroit Tigers' AA team, the SeaWolves, is located in Erie, and the
Washington Nationals' AA
affiliate, the Senators, plays
in the capital of Harrisburg
. Two independent-league teams, the
Lancaster Barnstormers and
York Revolution of the
Atlantic League of
Professional Baseball, are located in south-central
Pennsylvania, while the
Washington Wild Things of the
Frontier League are located in the
south-western corner of the state.
Each
summer, the Little League
World Series is held in South
Williamsport
, near where Little League Baseball was founded in
Williamsport
. Also, the first World Series between the Boston Pilgrims (which
became the Boston Red Sox) and
Pittsburgh Pirates was played in
Pittsburgh
in 1903.
College football is very popular in Pennsylvania.
The Penn
State University
Nittany Lions are coached
by Joe Paterno who has led Penn State to
two national championships (1982 & 1986) as well as five
undefeated seasons (1968, 1969, 1973, 1986 and 1994).
Penn
State plays its home games in the largest stadium in the United
States, Beaver
Stadium
, which seats 107,282. In addition, the
University
of Pittsburgh
Panthers have won
nine national championships (1915, 1916, 1918, 1929, 1931, 1934,
1936, 1937 and 1976) and have played eight undefeated seasons
(1904, 1910, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1920, 1937 and 1976).[3774] Pitt plays its home games at Heinz Field
, a facility it shares with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Other Pennsylvania
schools that have won national titles in football include Lafayette College
(1896) and the University
of Pennsylvania
(1895, 1897, 1904 and 1908).[3775]
College basketball is also popular in the state, especially in the
Philadelphia area where five universities, collectively termed the
Big Five, have a rich tradition
in
NCAA Division I basketball.
National
titles in college basketball have been won by the following
Pennsylvania universities: La Salle University
(1954), Temple University
(1938), University of Pennsylvania (1920 and
1921), University of Pittsburgh
(1928 and 1930) and Villanova University
(1985).[3776][3777]
In
motorsports, the Mario Andretti
dynasty of race drivers hails from Nazareth
. Notable Racetracks in Pennsylvania include
the Jennerstown Speedway
in Jennerstown
, the Lake Erie
Speedway in North East
, the Mahoning
Valley Speedway in Lehighton
, the Motordome
Speedway in Smithton
, the Mountain
Speedway in St. Johns,
the Nazareth
Speedway
in Nazareth
; and the Pocono Raceway
in Long Pond
, which is home both the Pennsylvania 500 and the Pocono 500.
There are also two motocross race tracks that host a round of the
AMA Toyota Motocross Championships in Pennsylvania. [High Point
Raceway]
High
Point in located in Mt. Morris, PA, and Steel City is located
in Delmont, PA.
Horse
racing courses for horses in Pennsylvania consist of The
Meadows Racetrack
, south of Pittsburgh
, Mohegan
Sun at Pocono Downs
, in
Wilkes-Barre
and Harrah's Chester Casino and
Racetrack
in Chester
which offer harness
racing, and Penn National Race Course
in Grantville
and Philadelphia Park
, in Bensalem
, and Presque Isle Downs
, south of Erie, which offer thoroughbred racing. Smarty Jones, the 2004
Kentucky Derby and
Preakness Stakes winner, had Philadelphia
Park as his home course.
Arnold Palmer, one of the 20th century's most
notable pro golfers, comes from Latrobe
, while Jim Furyk, a
current PGA member,
grew up near in Lancaster
. PGA tournaments in Pennsylvania include the
84 Lumber Classic, played at Nemacolin Woodlands Resort, in
Farmington
and the Northeast Pennsylvania Classic, played
at Glenmaura National Golf Club, in Moosic
.
Philadelphia is home to LOVE Park
, once a skateboarding
mecca, and across from City Hall, host to ESPN's X Games in 2001 and
2002.
Food
In his book
Yo Mama Cooks Like a Yankee, author Sharon
Hernes Silverman calls Pennsylvania the snack food capital of the
world. It leads all other states in the manufacture of
pretzels and potato chips. The
Sturgis Pretzel House introduced the
pretzel to America, and companies like Anderson Bakery Company,
Intercourse Pretzel Factory, and Snyder's of Hanover are leading
manufacturers in the Commonwealth.
Two of the three companies that define
the U.S. potato chip industry are based in Pennsylvania: Utz Quality Foods, Inc., which
started making chips in Hanover, Pennsylvania
in 1921, and Wise
Snack Foods which started making chips in Berwick
in 1921 (the third, Lay's
Potato Chips, is a Texas
company). Other companies such as Herr
Foods, Martin's Potato Chips, Snyder's of Berlin (not associated
with Snyder's of Hanover) and Troyer Farms Potato Products are
popular chip manufacturers.
The U.S. chocolate industry is centered in
Hershey,
Pennsylvania
, with Mars,
Godiva, and Wilbur Chocolate Company nearby,
and smaller manufacturers such as Asher's near Lansdale
and Gertrude Hawk
of Dunmore
. Other notable companies include Just Born in Bethlehem, PA
, makers of Hot
Tamales, Mike and Ikes, and the
Easter favorite marshmallow Peeps, Benzel's
Pretzels and Boyer Brothers of
Altoona,
PA
, which is well known for its Mallo Cups.
Auntie Anne's Pretzels began as a
market-stand in Downingtown, PA and now has corporate headquarters
in Lancaster City. Traditional Pennsylvania Dutch foods include
chicken potpie, schnitz un knepp (dried apples, hame, and
dumplings),
fasnachts (raised doughnuts),
scrapple, pretzels, bologna, and chow-chow. Shoofly is another
traditional Pennsylvanian Dutch food.
D.G.
Yuengling & Son
, America's oldest brewery, has been brewing
beer in Pottsville
since 1829.
Among
the regional foods associated with Philadelphia are pierogies, cheesesteaks, hoagie, soft pretzels, liver on a stick, Italian water ice, scrapple, Tastykake
, and strombolis. In Pittsburgh, tomato
ketchup was improved by
Henry John
Heinz from 1876 to the early 1900s. Famous to a lesser extent
than Heinz ketchup are the Pittsburgh's
Primanti Brothers Restaurant
sandwiches.
Outside of Scranton
, in Old
Forge there are dozens of Italian restaurants specializing in
pizza made unique by thick, light crust and American cheese.
Sauerkraut along with pork and mashed
potatoes is a common meal on New Year's Day in Pennsylvania.
Multi-ethnic cuisine is common , especially in the Philadelphia and
Coal Region areas.
Amish,
Chinese,
Italian,
Indian,
Japanese,
Korean,
Mexican,
Pakistani,
Persian,
Polish,
Russian,
Thai,
Turkish cuisine and many others can
be found not only in specialty restaurants but at hundreds of
community or religious festivals.
State symbols

The Ruffed Grouse
Gallery
File:Downtown_Aliquippa.jpg|Aliquippa
File:AllentownPA Skyline.jpg|Allentown
File:Cathedral_of_the_Blessed_Sacrament.jpg|Altoona
File:Beaver Falls.jpg|Beaver
Falls
File:Bethlehem_Pennsylvania_downtown.jpg|Bethlehem
File:Butler PA skyline.jpg|Butler
File:Corry,_Pennsylvania_Skyline.jpg|Corry
File:Easton_Skyline.jpg|Easton
File:Eriesky2.jpg|Erie
File:Greensburgskyline.jpg|Greensburg
File:Harrisburg,_Pennsylvania_State_Capital_Building.jpg|Harrisburg
File:Downtown hazleton pa.jpg|Hazleton
File:Jeannette-pennsylvania-downtown.jpg|Jeannette
File:Johnstownview.jpg|Johnstown
File:Lancaster, Pennsylvania
downtown.jpg|Lancaster
File:Latrobe PA MainStreet.jpg|Latrobe
File:LebanonBolognaDrop2008.jpg|Lebanon
File:Clinton County Pennsylvania
Courthouse.JPG|Lock Haven
File:Monessen01.JPG|Monessen
File:Kennedy_Square.jpg|New
Castle
File:Parker07.JPG|Parker
File:Philadelphia_Panorama_From_Camden.JPG|Philadelphia
File::Roberto Clemente Bridge in
Pittsburgh.JPG|Pittsburgh
File:Pottsville.jpg|Pottsville
File:Reading, Pennsylvani
skyline.jpg|Reading
File:DowntownScranton2003.jpg|Scranton
File:Uprising3.JPG|Shamokin
File:Uniontown PA.jpg|Uniontown
File:Warren Pennsylvania.jpg|Warren
File:WashingtonCountyCourthouse.JPG|Washington
File:WilkesBarreDowntown.jpg|Wilkes-Barre
File:Williamsport (Large).JPG|Williamsport
File:Market_Street,_York_PA.jpg_|York
See also
References
- PHMC: State Symbols
- Lowell Tribune, March 26, 2002
- Lancaster rifle
- PHMC: Agriculture in Pennsylvania
- The Quaker Province
- William Penn, Quaker
- Frame of Government
- Pennsylvania translates to "Penn's Woods" and was named after
the father of William Penn, the founder of the colony. Digital History: Persecution of the
Quakers
- The Quaker Province 1681–1776
- National Parks Service: Our Fourth Shore
- NOAA Office of Ocean and Coastal Resources
- Pennsylvania geography
- 2006 Statistical Abstract: Geography & Environment:
Land and Land Use
- Pennsylvania Time Zone
- Pennsylvania Indian tribes
- Charter for the Province of Pennsylvania-1681.
This charter, granted by Charles II to William Penn, constituted
him and his heirs proprietors of the province, which, in honor of
his father, Admiral
Penn, (whose cash advances
and services were thus requited,) was called Pennsylvania. To
perfect his title, William Penn purchased, on 1682-08-24, a
quit-claim from the Duke of York to the lands west of the
Delaware
River embraced in his patent of 1664
-
http://www.measuringworth.com/ppoweruk/result.php?use%5B%5D=CPI&use%5B%5D=NOMINALEARN&year_early=1681£71=16000&shilling71=&pence71=&amount=16000&year_source=1681&year_result=2008
Measuring Worth
- Quakers and the political process
- Hamilton, Alexander and Syrett, Harold C. The Papers of
Alexander Hamilton. 1963, page 240
- Library of Congress timeline 1764–1765
- Dickinson Letters
- Library of Congress timeline 1773–1774
- Library of Congress: Primary documents — The Declaration
of Independence
- Nine Capitals of the United States
- Pennsylvania ratifies the Constitution of 1787
- Pennsylvania's Capitals
- James Buchanan White House biography
- Battle of Gettysburg
- Components of Population Change
- Annual Estimates of the Population
- FactFinder: Census 2000 Demographic Profile
Highlights
- American Community Survey 2003 Multi-Year Survey
for Pennsylvania
- Religious diversity in Pennsylvania
- The ARDA
- These statistics are based on 7,116,348 of the estimated
8,448,193 religious adherents in Pennsylvania, and only the largest
of 115 different faiths are reported here. Data excludes most of
the historically African-American denominations. Public Law 94-521
prevents the Census Bureau from collecting better data, so this
information comes from the Association of religion
data archives at Penn State.) Terms used
to describe organizations are ARDA's and may not be the group's own
preferred name.
- The Amish and the Plain People of Lancaster County,
PA
- Definition of "dutch"
- Bureau of Economic Analysis
- Appeals court races wrap up with focus on voter
mobilization
- Fortune 500
- Philadelphia
stock exchange
- Largest Employers in Pennsylvania
- Agricultural Census 2002
-
http://www.kyw1060.com/Pa--Lawmakers-Consider-Table-Games--More-Small-Cas/5763077
- http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09035/946691-85.stm
- 23 Pennsylvania Law Weekly 324 (March 27,
2000)
- bio of Ed Rendell
- State Elected Officials
- Pennsylvania State Archives
- Pennsylvania Senators
- Pennsylvania House of Representatives
- Pennsylvania Senate
- David Brightbill
- Robert Mellow
- [1]
- [2]
- [3]
- Judicial districts
- Revenue Department Releases August Collections
(09/01/2006) http://www.revenue.state.pa.us/revenue/CWP/view.asp?Q=261929&A=208
Retrieved September 25, 2006.
- Congressional Directory Online
- Pennsylvania Manual 117
- Pennsylvania Local Government Fact Sheet,
2005
- "Local Government Entities in Pennsylvania" and
"Municipal Statistics" in Legislator’s Municipal Deskbook for
Pennsylvania
- Bloomsburg
- McCandless
- http://factfinder.census.gov/home/saff/main.html?_lang=en
-
http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ADPGeoSearchByListServlet?ds_name=ACS_2008_1YR_G00_&_lang=en&_ts=274470356028
- [4]
'Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE). Retrieved on
4-12-2009.'
- [5] 'National
Center for Education Statistics (NCES). Retrieved on
4-12-2009.'
- 'NCES.'
- [6] 'Pennsylvania Department of Education: Home
Education and Private Tutoring. Retrieved on 4-12-2009.'
- http://www.philadelphiazoo.org/index.php?id=10_2_1
- http://www.houdini.org
- Pa. knack for snacks a Farm Show feature -
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
- State Symbols
- State Symbols
- Slinky history
External links