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  2. Slate Belt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slate_Belt

    Slate Belt. The Slate Belt is a geographic region in Northampton County, Pennsylvania that is typically described as including Bangor, Wind Gap, Pen Argyl, and Portland. [1] The region is named for the historical prevalence of slate quarrying in the area.

  3. Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pen_Argyl,_Pennsylvania

    In 1853, Joseph Kellow discovered slate in the surrounding area, coining what is now known as the Slate Belt community. The name Pen Argyl originated from the Cornish name meaning "head" and the Anglo-Saxon name of Slate Rock, meaning "argylite". With the surge of quarrymen from Cornwall and England, the town expanded. Today, there is still one slate quarry in operation. [3] Pen Argyl was once ...

  4. Martinsburg Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martinsburg_Formation

    Slate is still quarried out of the Martinsburg in the slate belt of Pennsylvania. Other quarries that exist in the shale partings use the rock as crushed stone for structural and other earth fill operations.

  5. Pine Grove Furnace State Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_Grove_Furnace_State_Park

    The state park's historic place on the national register is the Pine Grove Iron Works of about 176 acres (0.71 km 2) with structures associated with the 1764 Pine Grove Furnace, which ended production in 1895. [2] The 1870 South Mountain RR and the subsequent 1891 Hunter's Run and Slate Belt Railroad provided the railway lines to the industrial areas of the state park.

  6. Quoits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quoits

    This is a popular outdoor variation played principally in and around Pennsylvania, USA (specifically the "Slate Belt" which is in the Lehigh Valley). This game uses two 1 lb (450 g) rubber quoits per player, which are pitched at a short metal pin mounted on a heavy 24 in × 24 in × 1 in (610 mm × 610 mm × 25 mm) slab of slate.

  7. Hunter's Run and Slate Belt Railroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter's_Run_and_Slate_Belt...

    The Hunter's Run and Slate Belt Railroad was a railway line from the Hunter's Run junction of the Gettysburg and Harrisburg Railway that ran southwestward along the south side of Mountain Creek to the Pine Grove Iron Works. The line serviced facilities for mining (e.g., Henry Clay iron mine), [2] for manufacturing (Crane's Siding clay refining ...

  8. Slateford, Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slateford,_Pennsylvania

    The name of this Pennsylvania town was derived from its location at the edge of the Northampton Slate Belt. Slate production began in the area as early as 1808, making it one of the earliest such sites in the United States. [1] Immigrants from Wales and England came to this community during the nineteenth century to work in the quarries. Quarries and slate production factories operated in the ...

  9. Monocacy Creek (Lehigh River tributary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocacy_Creek_(Lehigh...

    One of only fifty-six limestone streams in Pennsylvania, this creek's headwaters lie in the Slate Belt, near the borough of Chapman. [1] From Chapman, the Monocacy follows a 20.3-mile (32.7 km) course through the limestone Lehigh Valley.