Facts about Lackawanna
County
Lackawanna
County, situated in northeastern Pennsylvania, was created in
1878 from the northern portion of Luzerne County. The name "Lackawanna"
stems from the Algonquin Indian word meaning "where the streams
meet."
Lackawanna
Countys 1990 population was 219,039, with 81,805 (37 percent)
residing in the city of Scranton, the county seat. The northwestern
and southeastern thirds of the county are generally rural areas
of woodland and approximately 250 dairy and vegetable farms (23
percent of the countys population). The majority of the
population (77 percent) lives in the middle third of the county,
the "Lackawanna Valley."
In this
valley, anthracite coal was discovered in the 1820s, and as a
result, the countys population grew. Coal-mining and the
development of railroads, iron works, and textile mills transformed
this rural area into an urban area anchored on the south by the
city of Scranton and on the north by the city of Carbondale.
Today
diversified manufacturing, corporate bank-office and service industries
have replaced the coal-mining and railroading operations as the
basis of the countys economy. Several industrial parks and
office parks are located throughout the county. Tourism has also
begun attracting millions of visitors to the several historic
and family attraction landmarks including the Steamtown National
Historic Site, the Lackawanna Coal Mine Tour, and Montage Mountain
Ski Resort and Outdoor Performing Area. Montage Mountain is also
home of the Lackawanna Stadium, featuring the AAA Scranton Wilkes-Barre
Red Barons, the Phillies top farm club. Newly open on Montage
Mountain is the Ice Rink at the Lackawanna Stadium and the Glenmaura
National Golf Club.
With the
designation of the Lackawanna Valley as a corridor for the development
of a Heritage Park under the state-wide heritage park system,
a plan for the conservation and development of the "Lackawanna
Heritage Valley" was adopted in 1991. The plans focus
is on the creation of programs to preserve historical and natural
assets; interpret their lessons to residents and visitors; reclaim
devastated mining areas; and encourage economic, educational,
and tourism development and productive use of the valleys
natural, cultural, and recreational resources.
With a
mix of urban and rural lifestyles, a diverse ethnic population,
and a recent boom in all types of development including the construction
of the Lackawanna Valley Industrial Highway, a
15-mile limited access roadway, Lackawanna County is beginning
to experience a "second birth," and its future appears
as promising as the success of its past.
Source:
Lackawanna County Regional Planning Commission
County
Statistics
Need some stats for
your county? Check out these resources.
Government information
site on demographics, economics, and educational information:
http://govinfo.library.orst.edu/
US Census Bureau
United States Department of Commerce
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To
find timely, relevant, and quality data about the people and
economy of the United States, click here:
http://www.census.gov/