Indiana, Pennsylvania This article is about the Pennsylvania borough.

Indiana, Pennsylvania .

Indiana, Pennsylvania Downtown Indiana Downtown Indiana Indiana, Pennsylvania is positioned in Pennsylvania Indiana, Pennsylvania - Indiana, Pennsylvania County Indiana Website Indiana Borough Indiana is a borough in and the governmental center of county of Indiana County in the U.S.

Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The populace was 13,975 at the 2010 census, and since 2013 has been part of the Pittsburgh urbane region after being a long time part of the Pittsburgh Media Market.

Indiana is also the principal town/city of the Indiana, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area.

The biggest employer in the borough today is Indiana University of Pennsylvania, the biggest of 14 PASSHE schools in the state. The Indiana Weekly Messenger was presented in the town between 1874 and 1946. The Downtown Indiana Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993.

Also listed on the National Register are Breezedale, Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railway Indiana Passenger Station, Silas M.

Clark House, Graff's Market, James Mitchell House, Old Indiana County Courthouse, Indiana Borough 1912 Municipal Building, Indiana Armory, Old Indiana County Jail and Sheriff's Office, and John Sutton Hall. Indiana Mall is the area's primary shopping center.

Natural gas surveying and manufacturing have picked up some of the slack, and Indiana serves as the home of the biggest privately owned drilling business in the United States, S.W.

Indiana was the place of birth and hometown of actor Jimmy Stewart (1908 1997), who was born there and lived at 104 North 7th Street.

Even with the fact that he left the region upon graduating from high school, the town always followed his longterm position closely, with the small-town journal periodically publishing rumors in his later years that Stewart prepared to return there to live.

Environmentalist author Edward Abbey (1927 1989), was born at the Indiana hospital and raised in Indiana and near the Indiana County suburbs and villages of Saltsburg, Pennsylvania, Tanoma, and Home, Pennsylvania.

Abbey's first novel, Jonathan Troy (1954), is set entirely in a thinly disguised Indiana, and his novel The Fool's Progress (1988), which he called his "fat masterpiece", is an autobiographical account of his burgeoning up in this region and his imagined attempt to return home after a lifetime spent mostly in the desert Southwest.

His nonfiction book Appalachian Wilderness (1970) lovingly describes Indiana and Home.

There is a Pennsylvania state historical marker for Abbey at Home.

Jim Nance, a football player who was inducted into New England Patriots Hall of Fame in 2009, was born in Indiana and graduated from Indiana High School Indiana, Pennsylvania is positioned at 40 37 16 N 79 9 18 W (40.6211, -79.1549). The borough is an autonomous municipality surrounded by White Township.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the borough has a total region of 1.8 square miles (4.7 km2), all of it land.

In the borough the populace was spread out, with 8.2% under the age of 18, 59.4% from 18 to 24, 13.7% from 25 to 44, 10.5% from 45 to 64, and 8.2% who were 65 years of age or older.

Indiana University of Pennsylvania (or IUP) is a enhance college founded in 1875.

For enhance K-12 education, the Indiana Area School District supports four neighborhood elementary schools (Eisenhower Elementary, Horace Mann, East Pike, Ben Franklin), a junior high school (Indiana Area Junior High School) and high school (Indiana Area Senior High School), which are accredited and recognized for character.

The non-profit Indi - Kids or (Indiana County Child Day Care Centers) offers NAEYC-accredited care for kids of students and improve members on the ground of IUP and throughout the community.

WIUP 90.1 College Indiana Indiana University of Pennsylvania WQMU 92.5 Hot AC Indiana St.

WFSJ 103.7 Christian Contemporary Indiana Godstock Ministries, Inc.

WMUG 105.1 Religious Indiana The Christian Witness, Inc.

WDAD 1450 Oldies Indiana Renda Broadcasting Corporation Indiana, Pennsylvania, is also home to the Indiana Gazette, formerly the Indiana Evening Gazette, a seven-day-a-week publication.

Although Indiana County is considered to be part of the Pittsburgh DMA by Nielsen, many region residents view the Johnstown TV stations.

"Revised Delineations of Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and Combined Statistical Areas, and Guidance on Uses of the Delineations of These Areas" (PDF).

"About The Indiana weekly messenger.

(Indiana, Pa.) 1874-1946".

"Pennsylvania: Population and Housing Unit Counts" (PDF).

"Enumeration finds more losses than gain in Indiana County".

Indiana Gazette.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Indiana, Pennsylvania.

Indiana Borough official site Indiana in Indiana County, Pennsylvania Municipalities and communities of Indiana County, Pennsylvania, United States

Categories:
Indiana County, Pennsylvania - University suburbs in the United States - County seats in Pennsylvania - Pittsburgh urbane region - Populated places established in 1805 - Boroughs in Indiana County, Pennsylvania - 1816 establishments in Pennsylvania