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Laurel Hill State Park is a 3,935-acre (1,592 ha) Pennsylvania state park in Jefferson and Middlecreek Townships, Somerset County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Laurel Hill Lake is a 63-acre (25 ha) man-made lake with a dam that was constructed during the Great Depression by the young men of CCC camps NP-5-PA (first called SP-8-PA) and SP-15-PA.
Laurel Hill, also known as Laurel Ridge or Laurel Mountain, is a 70-mile-long (110 km) mountain that is located in Pennsylvania's Allegheny Mountains. This ridge is flanked by Negro Mountain to its east and Chestnut Ridge to its west. The mountain is home to six state parks: Laurel Ridge State Park, Laurel Mountain State Park, Linn Run State ...
Laurel Hill State Park: Somerset County: 3,935 acres (1,592 ha) 1945: Laurel Hill Creek, Laurel Hill Lake: Former Recreation Demonstration Area with the largest CCC architecture collection of any Pennsylvania state park: Laurel Mountain State Park: Somerset and Westmoreland Counties: 493 acres (200 ha) 1964: None
That includes Region 6, which has Somerset as well as Beaver, Butler, Armstrong, Indiana, Cambria, Washington, Westmoreland, Greene and Fayette, the Copper Kettle Trail, Laurel Hill State Park, is ...
The Daily American. August 12, 2024 at 2:13 PM. Bluegrass musicians and music fans will return to Somerset on Saturday and Sunday for the 16th annual Laurel Hill Bluegrass Festival at Laurel Hill ...
The Laurel Highlands Hiking Trail is a 70.1-mile (112.8 km) hiking trail in southwestern Pennsylvania, which largely follows the Laurel Hill geologic formation. It begins at Ohiopyle State Park and travels generally to the northeast, and ends at Conemaugh Gorge near Johnstown. Construction of the trail began in 1970.
The Tired Iron Antique Tractor Show, Sept. 30, will be at Laurel Hill State Park beach parking area. The featured tractor is the International Harvester. Registration begins at 8 a.m. Awards given ...
The park is made up of several non-contiguous tracts, separated by various state game lands and state forest districts, on top of the Laurel Hill geologic formation. The park was approved by Pennsylvania Governor Raymond P. Shafer on July 10, 1967. [1]