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Settlers Cabin Park

Coordinates: 40°26′3.17″N 80°9′35.02″W / 40.4342139°N 80.1597278°W / 40.4342139; -80.1597278
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Settlers Cabin Park
The Walker-Ewing-Glass Log House, located on Pinkerton Run Road, is the 1780s log house that gives Settlers Cabin Park its name.
Settlers Cabin Park is located in Pennsylvania
Settlers Cabin Park
Settlers Cabin Park
Settlers Cabin Park is located in the United States
Settlers Cabin Park
Settlers Cabin Park
TypeMunicipal
LocationAllegheny County, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°26′3.17″N 80°9′35.02″W / 40.4342139°N 80.1597278°W / 40.4342139; -80.1597278
Area1,610-acre (7 km2)

Settlers Cabin Park is a 1,610-acre (7 km2) county park that is located in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is a part of the county's 12,000-acre (49 km2) network of nine distinct parks.

History

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Archaeologists from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History helped identify the 1780s log house that gave the park its name. The themes of the eleven picnic groves in this park are derived from the names of Indigenous peoples of the Americas: Algonquin, Seneca, Apache, Tomahawk, etc.

Geography and notable features

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This American park is situated 10 miles (16 km) west of downtown Pittsburgh in Collier, North Fayette, and Robinson Townships.

Settlers Cabin has the most heavily used of the county's three wave pools. The location along the major route to the airport makes it accessible, and swimmers from Ohio and West Virginia can easily reach the site. A diving is also available.[1]

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References

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  1. ^ "Parks | Settlers Cabin | About | Allegheny County". www.alleghenycounty.us. Retrieved 2022-01-07.
  • Smith, Helene and George Swetnam (1991). A Guidebook to Historic Western Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 0-8229-5424-9.
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