Warren County (PA) Genealogy
Warren County Historical Road Markers
Contributed by Betty Matteson Rhodes
Frequent contributor Betty Matteson Rhodes has provided the data shown below. It is a good representation of some of the historical road markers shown throughout the county. If anyone has taken digital photos of any of these markers, or of any other markers, please send to your web site maintainer.
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Name:
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Robert Houghwout Jackson | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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August 23, 1997 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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Route 426 & Eldred Hill, Spring Creek | |
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Category:
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Government & Politics, Government & Politics 20th Century | |
| Description and Marker text: |
Lawyer & jurist. Chief U.S. prosecutor, Nuremberg war crimes trials in Germany after World War II. Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court, 1941-54; noted for his defense of civil liberties. Served in President Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration starting in 1934; U.S. Solicitor General, 1938-39, & Attorney General, 1940-41. Jackson was born on the family farm here in Spring Creek. |
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Name:
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Grandin Well, The | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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July 15, 1959 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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U.S. 62, .4 mile S of Allegheny River Bridge near Tidioute | |
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Category:
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Business & Industry, Oil | |
| Description and Marker text: |
At oil spring across river at this point J.L. Grandin began second well drilled specifically for oil, Aug., 1859, after Drake's success. It was dry, showing risks involved in oil drilling. |
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Name:
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Indian Paint Hill | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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October 23, 1947 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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U.S. 62, 3 miles NE of Tidioute | |
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Category:
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Native American | |
| Description and Marker text: |
Across the river from here deposits of red ochre and adjacent petroleum springs provided the Indians with raw materials for face and body paint. |
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Name:
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Thompson's Island | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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October 23, 1947 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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U.S. 62, 9 miles SW of Warren (MISSING) | |
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Category:
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American Revolution, Military, Native American | |
| Description and Marker text: |
An advance party of Brodhead's expedition of 1779 into the Seneca country had a skirmish here with 30 or 40 Indians, the only fighting which took place in that campaign, and the only Revolutionary battle in northwestern Pennsylvania. |
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Name:
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Gen. William Irvine | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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October 23, 1947 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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Old U.S. 6 (SR 3022) W of U.S. 62, Irvine | |
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Category:
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Professions & Vocations | |
| Description and Marker text: |
Surveyed Donation Lands in this area in 1785. Later bought a large tract of land, developed by his son Callender and grandson, Dr. William Irvine. One of the tenant houses of the estate stands opposite. |
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Name:
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Buckaloons | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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October 23, 1947 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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Buckaloons Park, near U.S. 62 E of Irvine | |
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Category:
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Native American | |
| Description and Marker text: |
A famous Indian village at the junction of Brokenstraw Creek and the Allegheny, visited by Celoron in 1749 and destroyed by Brodhead in 1779. Burial mounds excavated here indicate the antiquity of this site. |
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Name:
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Celoron's Expedition | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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October 23, 1947 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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Pennsylvania Ave. (Business U.S. 6) at Hickory St., Warren | |
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Category:
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Exploration, Government & Politics, Government & Politics 18th Century | |
| Description and Marker text: |
In 1749 a French force under Celoron de Blainville entered the Ohio valley by way of Chautauqua Lake and Conewango Creek. A lead plate was buried at the mouth of the Conewango claiming the area for France. |
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Marker Name:
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Conewango | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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October 23, 1947 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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Pennsylvania Ave. (Business U.S. 6), Conewango Creek Bridge, Warren | |
|
Category:
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Early Settlement, Native American | |
| Description and Marker text: |
Mid-18th century Seneca village located on site of present Warren. First mentioned by Bonnecamps, in 1749, as composed of 12 or 13 cabins. Name in Iroquois means "below the riffles." |
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Name:
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Seneca Crossing | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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November 3, 2007 |
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Marker Type:
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Roadside | |
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Location:
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Intersection of Warren-Onoville Rd. (SR1013) & Eqypt Hollow Rd., Glade Twp. | |
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Category:
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American Revolution, Exploration, Native American, Paths & Trails, Transportation | |
| Description and Marker text: |
Native Americans, French explorers, and Revolutionary War soldiers all used this 8-mile cross-country portage to access the upper reaches of the Allegheny River from Conewango Creek. This historic trail provided travelers with a preferable alternative to the arduous 26-mile upriver trip to the heart of the Seneca Nation. Several lower branches of Seneca Crossing converged near here, the trail's mid-point. The route continued to Kinzua. |
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Name:
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Warren County | |
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County:
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Warren | |
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Date Dedicated:
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March 12, 1981 |
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Marker Type:
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City | |
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Location:
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County Courthouse, 4th Ave. at Market St., Warren | |
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Category:
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Government & Politics, Government & Politics 19th Century | |
| Description and Marker text: |
Formed March 12, 1800 from Allegheny and Lycoming counties. Named for Gen. Joseph Warren, killed at Bunker Hill. Warren, the county seat, was laid out in 1795. Long known for its oil and timber operations, and site of the Cornplanter Indian Grant. |
The Cornplanter Indian Grant:
Chief Cornplanter
"Pennsylvania's one surviving Indian community lived until 1964 on the
Cornplanter Tract in Warren County, northwest Pennsylvania. In that
year the newly constructed Kinzua Dam was shut, flooding the Allegheny
Reservoir and submerging the community's physical remains.
The Cornplanter Tract was not an Indian reservation, it was a grant of
land made in 1791 to Cornplanter, a chief of the Seneca Nation, and to
his heirs by the Pennsylvania General Assembly. Through this gift, the
government of Pennsylvania expressed its gratitude to Cornplanter for
his Indian diplomacy in the early years of American independence.
Cornplanter's people knew him as Kaintwakon, meaning "by what one
plants." The white people knew him also as John Abeel (rendered also as
Obail) and by other names. He was born to his Seneca Indian mother
about 1750 at Ganawagus, near Avon, New York. The Wolf Clan to which
she belonged was a ranking Indian family. Among its members were
several prominent Indian leaders, Kiasutha, Handsome Lake, Red Jacket,
and Governor Blacksnake, all principals in the drama of Indian-white
relations which spanned the remainder of the century after 1755.
Ultimately, this drama would determine whether this country, especially
that part west of the Allegheny Mountains, would be French or English,
European or Indian. Chief Cornplanter died in Warren
County, Pennsylvania, in 1836. He requested
a grave with no marker. A monument has been constructed over his grave."
This page was last updated on Saturday, September 13, 2008.
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