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Morgantown, Pennsylvania

Coordinates: 40°09′18″N 75°53′24″W / 40.15500°N 75.89000°W / 40.15500; -75.89000
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Morgantown, Pennsylvania
Odd Fellows Hall
Odd Fellows Hall
Morgantown is located in Pennsylvania
Morgantown
Morgantown
Morgantown is located in the United States
Morgantown
Morgantown
Coordinates: 40°09′18″N 75°53′24″W / 40.15500°N 75.89000°W / 40.15500; -75.89000
CountryUnited States
StatePennsylvania
CountiesBerks, Lancaster
TownshipsCaernarvon, Caernarvon
Elevation
600 ft (200 m)
Population
 (2010)
 • Total826
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern (EST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)
ZIP code
19543
Area code(s)610 and 484
GNIS feature ID1181556[1]

Morgantown is a census-designated place[2] in Caernarvon Township, located in southern Berks County, Pennsylvania as well as partially in Caernarvon Township in Lancaster County. As of the 2010 census, the population was 826 residents.[3]

History

Morgantown was named after Colonel Jacob Morgan, who laid out the town around 1770. His father, Thomas Morgan, had been a native of Wales, a captain in the French and Indian War, and owner of a large tract of choice land in Caernarvon Township. Jacob Morgan settled in this area around 1765, building a large stone house, which still stands on Hartz Road between Mineview Drive and Shiloh Road. It is rumored to have housed George Washington during a brief overnight visit. The house has been restored by its owners.

Morgantown was, until the arrival of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, a mostly agriculture-based settlement. Now it is much larger and busier with the settlement of several manufacturing companies, including Timet, Morgan Corp. Stoltzfus Spreaders, Viwinco Windows and McNeilus cement mixers. Other aspects of the town have grown too, especially the roads. In the 1970s the Morgantown Expressway Interstate 176 was built to interstate highway standards, providing a link between Morgantown and PA 23 and Reading and US 422.

Conestoga Christian School and High Point Baptist Academy are based in the area. Also, although not actually in Morgantown but part of its neighboring town, Elverson, Twin Valley High School overlooks parts of Morgantown and is where most of the town's children attend school.

In 1987, an entrepreneur named Raymond Carr laid out plans for New Morgan which was incorporated into a borough in 1988. The borough currently has 35 residents, and the actual town has yet to be built.

Geography

Morgantown is drained by the Conestoga River, which flows westward into the Susquehanna River. The confluence of multiple sources occurs in the CDP. It has a hot-summer humid continental climate (Dfa) and is in hardiness zone 6b.

Economy

Morgantown has a small public airport east of the center of town.[4]

Morgantown Center is an event facility along the Pennsylvania Turnpike which houses "Classic Auto Mall" a large classic car consignment house.[5]

Cultural references

In the opening scene of Master of the World (1961), just before an explosion on a nearby mountain, a character in a fictionalized 19th-century Morgantown declares:

We're living in a cemetery. This is the most boring and monotonous town in the entire United States -- Morgantown, Pennsylvania. A place where nothing can possibly happen.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Morgantown". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. ^ https://www.census.gov/2010census/
  3. ^ https://www.census.gov/#
  4. ^ "Morgantown Airport". Retrieved February 17, 2020.
  5. ^ "Morgantown Center". Retrieved February 17, 2020.
  6. ^ William Witney (Director) (1961). Master of the World (Film). American International Pictures.