Frackville, Pennsylvania Frackville is positioned in Pennsylvania Frackville - Frackville Location of Frackville in Pennsylvania Frackville is a borough in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, United States.

Frackville is positioned near the intersection of Interstate 81 and Pennsylvania State Route 61, approximately 102 miles (164 km) northwest of Philadelphia and 45 miles (72 km) southwest of Wilkes-Barre.

Frackville is titled for Daniel Frack, an early settler. 4 Current day Frackville Frackville was settled in 1861 and incorporated in 1876, when the villages of Frackville and Mountain City consolidated to form the borough of Frackville.

Early in the twentieth century, anthracite coal quarrying was the chief trade of the region, although Frackville remained a dominantly residentiary community.

There is a small patch-town owning the name "Mahanoy Plane" at the northern foot of Frackville's Broad Mountain.

It culminated with a Frackville Cruise Night that had routes running throughout the borough.

There was once a video store titled "Frackville Video".

It moved to close-by Girardville, but somehow kept the name "Frackville Video." Frackville sits in the middle of Northeastern Pennsylvania's historic Coal Region, about 4 miles south of Shenandoah.

Coal quarrying was never actually done in Frackville itself; it was, however, a origin of transporting the coal through the now-defunct barns companies.

Many of Frackville's inhabitants are working at small-town factories, retail outlets, and the various Pennsylvania State Prisons in the immediate area.

Located at Interstate 81 Exit 124, Frackville is a prominent stop for travelers.

In 1974, Lorraine Stanton began interviewing the elderly people of Frackville in preparation for the town's 1976 Centennial.

When the Frackville Borough Council agreed to give space in the new Borough Complex and acquire her collection, the vision became a reality.

The Frackville Museum welcomes the donation of any items relevant to the town, such as small collectibles, small-town school memorabilia, Frackville souvenirs, or company items from years gone by.

Frackville is positioned at 40 47 1 N 76 14 1 W (40.783618, -76.233662). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the borough has a total region of 0.6 square miles (1.6 km2), all of it land.

In 2003, Frackville became a partner of the Upper Schuylkill Regional Main Street program along with neighboring communities Ashland, Girardville, Mahanoy City, Ringtown and Shenandoah.

The various educational programs including grant writing courses arranged through the county-wide program made it possible to complete $523,304.00 in projects in the targeted central company precinct in Frackville Borough from 2004 and closing through 2008.

Frackville has over half a dozen parks which can be used by inhabitants of all ages.

Among the borough's sports leagues are: Frackville Mountaineer mini, pee-wee and midget football teams, Frackville Area Softball Association, Frackville Legion Baseball Team, Frackville tee-ball, intermediate and Little League Baseball teams, CYO basketball squads and many others.

Frackville has a borough pool which opens each spring for the people to use.

The borough is serviced by three fire companies and the Frackville Ambulance Service.

Frackville is home of the Schuylkill County Brew Fest, which will be in its third year come 2017.

Frackville's foremost police protection is provided 24 hours a day by the Frackville Borough Police Department.

The Frackville Police Station is positioned in the Borough Hall Building.

The Pennsylvania State Police have a barracks positioned on the east end of the borough (PSP Frackville Barracks).

The Schuylkill County Sheriff's Department also retain jurisdiction and furnish police service to Frackville.

In the borough the populace was spread out with 19.7% under the age of 18, 6.6% from 18 to 24, 25.4% from 25 to 44, 22.5% from 45 to 64, and 25.8% who were 65 years of age or older.

The book traced the longterm position of Frackville's Jordan Brothers who appeared on Dick Clark's "American Bandstand" and were headliners on Clark's 49-day "Caravan of Stars" that toured the United States and Canada.

The Jordans were featured on a several Alan Freed stage shows and were mainstays on all the meaningful East Coast TV programs, especially in the Tri-State area.Their biggest hit, in 1966, was "Gimme Some Lovin.'" In a commercial bumper amid an episode of Pardon the Interruption that first aired August 3, 2010, Tony Kornheiser mentioned that in Frackville it's 20 degrees colder than anywhere else on Earth.

Borough of Frackville Official Website Frackville Area Historical Society Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frackville, Pennsylvania.

Ashland Auburn Coaldale Cressona Deer Lake Frackville Gilberton Girardville Gordon Landingville Mahanoy City Mc - Adoo Mechanicsville Middleport Minersville Mount Carbon New Philadelphia New Ringgold Orwigsburg Palo Alto Pine Grove Port Carbon Port Clinton Ringtown Schuylkill Haven Shenandoah St.

Categories:
Populated places established in 1861 - Boroughs in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania - Coal suburbs in Pennsylvania - Ukrainian communities in the United States - 1876 establishments in Pennsylvania