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Nesquehoning Creek

Rivers of Carbon County, PennsylvaniaRivers of PennsylvaniaRivers of Schuylkill County, PennsylvaniaTributaries of the Lehigh River
Sources of Nesquehoning creek from hzlt93sw Rot90cw
Sources of Nesquehoning creek from hzlt93sw Rot90cw

Nesquehoning Creek is an east flowing 14.9-mile-long (24.0 km) tributary of the Lehigh River in northeastern Pennsylvania in the United States.Nesquehoning Creek joins the Lehigh River 2 miles (3.2 km) upstream of the borough of Jim Thorpe in Carbon County.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Nesquehoning Creek (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Nesquehoning Creek
D&L Trail,

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Wikipedia: Nesquehoning CreekContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.8755 ° E -75.7615 °
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D&L Trail

D&L Trail

Pennsylvania, United States
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Sources of Nesquehoning creek from hzlt93sw Rot90cw
Sources of Nesquehoning creek from hzlt93sw Rot90cw
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Lehigh Gorge Trail
Lehigh Gorge Trail

The Lehigh Gorge Trail is a 26-mile (42 km) multi-use rail trail that winds along the valley of the Lehigh River Gorge from White Haven, to Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania. Much of the trail runs through the Lehigh Gorge State Park, and was originally developed into a railroad corridor after an extension of the Lehigh Canal was first built under the great push of Main Line of Public Works to connect the Delaware Valley to Pittsburgh. Dating to 1837, the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company and its subsidiary Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad (LH&S RR) worked to tame the rough terrains of the gorge, initially for a northward extension of the Lehigh Canal, then for a railroad graded through passing the twists of the gorge after floods in the later-1840s wiped out the northward extension of the much older (lower) Lehigh Canal, extending down to the industries of Allentown and Philadelphia. LH&S became a holding company in the 1870s and to this day lease the trackage of this important rail corridor to several rail companies with track rights, including Norfolk Southern and the Reading Blue Mountain and Northern Railroad. Parts of the trail are rights of ways of the competing Lehigh Valley Railroad (LVRR), incorporated in the 1870s to bust the monopoly the LH&S had over transit between the Delaware Valley and Wilkes-Barre. Both rail systems were acquired during the Conrail mergers, with parts combined for today's Railbed. The trail is located on the unused remnants, and today is part of the 165-mile (266 km) D & L Trail, which extends northwards along the other abandoned trackage beyond Mountain Top down into the Avoca and Moosic suburbs between Wilkes-Barre and Scranton.