We are from Washington PA

We are from Washington PA This is just a page for everyone in the area to post upcoming events. This page is for everyone in our area! I hope you enjoy.

If you are aware of upcoming events please feel free to post about them. It’s so hard to find out what’s going on in the city anymore. This page will also be used to give you a little bit of history on the city. There are so many amazing places that we overlook every single day. City of Washington, Pennsylvania
"An Ideal Place to Live and Work"
Form of Government Third Class City
Population 13,663


City Area 3 1/3 Square Miles
Climate Mean annual temperature, 51.7° F; average rainfall, 40.8 inches; average snowfall, 41,0 inches
Altitude 1,156 feet above sea level
Parks Washington Park - 255 acres of beautiful woodland with facilities for all kinds of sports and swimming and walking trails
Playgrounds Three playgrounds located throughout the City with supervised summer programs
Newspaper One daily - Observer Reporter
Radio Stations Two plus ATT Broadband Cable TV - WJPA, WKEG
Highway U.S. 19 and 40; State Routes 18, 844 and 136; and Intersection of Interstates 70 and 79
Hospital Washington Hospital with new Cancer and Cardiac Centers
Library Citizens Library and Cultural Center
Schools 2 public - Washington High School, Washington Park School and 1 parochial - JFK
Washington & Jefferson College - 1500 Students
Churches 45 churches representing 21 denominations
Police and Fire The City is served by full-time Police and Fire Departments
Public Transit Fixed bus routes locally and to downtown Pittsburgh; specialized transit services throughout the county for eligible riders
Within 5 miles of Meadow Casino, Tanger Outlets, Crown Center Mall

11/15/2014

Hello everyone! Is there anything exciting going on in the next month or so? I would love to post public events.

05/15/2014

Does anyone know of anything fun going on in the next few weeks? Please be sure to share!

Bradford built the first stone house on South Main Street in Washington, Pennsylvania in 1788, which, by frontier standa...
08/29/2013

Bradford built the first stone house on South Main Street in Washington, Pennsylvania in 1788, which, by frontier standards, ranked as a mansion. The handsome stairway was solid mahogany; the mantel-pieces and other interior furnishings, imported from Philadelphia, were transported across the Alleghenies at considerable expense. While restoring the house a secret underground passage was discovered leading to a nearby ravine. This tunnel was presumably used as an escape route in the event of an attack on the house.
By the 1930s, the building was in such disrepair that Charles Morse Stotz did not include the building in his The Early Architecture of Western Pennsylvania.[4] However, by the book's 2nd printing in 1966, Stotz himself has led the rehabilitation.[4]
In 1959, the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission assumed control of the house and supervised restoration of its eighteenth-century design. They installed furnishings of that that time in Pennsylvania that they felt reflected Bradford's place in society. A management agreement was signed in 1982, turning the management of the Bradford House over to the Bradford House Historical Association. The museum is open from early May through mid December, giving group tours and hosting other special events.
The home was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973 and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1983.[2][5]
It is located at 175 South Main Street in Washington.
The Bradford House is owned by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission and is managed as a historic house museum by local volunteers for the Bradford House Historical Association. The house is open for tours seasonally, and contains period furnishings and changing exhibits.

http://www.thegeorgewashington.com/The George Washington Hotel in Washington, Pennsylvania was designed by renowned arch...
08/29/2013

http://www.thegeorgewashington.com/

The George Washington Hotel in Washington, Pennsylvania was designed by renowned architect William Lee Stoddart and built in 1923. Since then, it has been graced by Presidents John F. Kennedy and Harry S. Truman, film star Joan Blondell, big band leader Harry James, among many persons of distinction. The hotel is also home to the largest remaining mural of early American artist, Malcolm Parcell.
Owner Kyrk Pyros is an alumnus of Penn State University with a degree in Structural Engineering. Pyros takes pride in building new residential and commercial properties,[citation needed] he also takes pride in restoring historic buildings to their original beauty. He is currently in the process of restoring the George Washington Hotel in Washington, Pennsylvania.


Entrance to lobby
After the closing of the Hays Hall dormitory at Washington & Jefferson College, the George Washington Hotel served as a residence hall from 1968 to 1971.[1] The College rented the entire 5th and 6th floors.[1] These two floors contained 25 rooms each, which was enough for the 86 former residents of Hayes Hall, the House Mother, and four floor proctors.[1]
The horror film New Terminal Hotel, starring Corey Haim, was filmed there.[2] In 2010, firefighters discovered what they believed to be the scene of the "most grisly murder in [Washington in] 35 years" and spent 8 hours investigating the scene before discovering that it was instead leftover from the film.[2]

08/14/2013

How did everyone enjoy the Washington County Fair so far this year?

07/31/2013

Here is a little bit of information on Washington for those of you who have nothing to do....

Delaware Indian chief Tangooqua, commonly known as "Catfish", had a camp on a branch of Chartiers Creek in what is now part of the city of Washington.[8] The French labeled the area "Wissameking", meaning "catfish place", as early as 1757.[8] The area of Washington was settled by many immigrants from Scotland and the north of Ireland along with settlers from eastern and central parts of colonial Virginia. It was first settled by colonists around 1768.
The Pennsylvania General Assembly passed an act on March 28, 1781, erecting the County of Washington and naming "Catfish Camp" as the place for holding the first election. This was the first county in the U.S. to be named in honor of General George Washington. David Hoge laid out a plan of lots immediately after the legislature's action. His original plot carried the name "Bassett, alias Dandridge Town," but before the plot was recorded, lines were drawn through "Bassett, alias Dandridge Town" with ink, and the word "Washington" was written above. There have long been rumors among locals that the town was named “Washington” because George Washington spent the night in the region once. This is not true however; Washington had never been to the area.
The original plot dedicated a tract of ground to the people for recreational purposes. A lot was given for a courthouse where the current building now stands, and Lots 43 and 102, according to the plan, were presented by Hoge to "His Excellency, General Washington, and Mrs. Washington."
Washington, Pennsylvania, was the center for the 'Whiskey Rebellion' of 1791, which was one of the first open rebellions against the new U.S. government and Constitution. The rebellion was centered around a tax being imposed on whiskey distillation in the region. The house of David Bradford, one of the leaders of the rebellion, is now a museum devoted to the Whiskey Rebellion, the David Bradford House, located on South Main Street of the city.
The town was incorporated as a borough on February 13, 1810, and became a city of the third class in 1924.[9]
In August 1875, construction began of the 3 ft (914 mm) Waynesburg and Washington Railroad, conceived by John Day in 1874 and chartered in 1875.[10] Passenger services ended in 1929, conversion to standard gauge followed in 1944, when it was renamed the Waynesburg Secondary. Freight services ended in 1976, although part of the line still survives for access to a coal mine.
James B. Wilson chartered The Washington Electric Street Railways in 1889 with construction beginning in November 1890. The first line was built from the Waynesburg and Washington Narrow Gauge station to Wilson Orchard, just north of the present day site of the Washington Hospital.[11]
In 1903 the Washington and Canonsburg Railway Company linked the two towns with a trolley line. The company was bought by the Philadelphia Company in 1906, later becoming part of the Pittsburgh Railway Company, linking through to Pittsburgh as part of their interurban service in 1909.[12] The line closed on August 29, 1953. A short section of the line and a number of trolley cars are preserved at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum north of the city.

07/31/2013

Where did the sunshine go?

07/30/2013

This page is for everyone in our area! If you are aware of upcoming events please feel free to post about them. It’s so hard to find out what’s going on in the city anymore. This page will also be used to give you a little bit of history on the city. There are so many amazing places that we overlook every single day. I hope you enjoy.

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Washington, PA
15301

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