Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania) (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania), is an otherwise non-descript 1871 ft peak forming the steep southwestern faces of the mountain pass's saddle connecting and dividing the Wyoming Valley from the Lehigh Valley. The whole uplands north and west faces over look the Wyoming Valley from the southeastern corner near Hazleton towards and through the greater south Wilkes-Barre area. The southern and eastern slopes just give peeks into portions of the Poconos and wider views of the Lehigh Valley descending down to White Haven, for the Poconos technically are left-bank bounded by the Lehigh.

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania), is an otherwise non-descript 1871 ft peak forming the steep southwestern faces of the mountain pass's saddle connecting and dividing the Wyoming Valley from the Lehigh Valley. On the opposite side of the saddle, which forms an important multi-modal transport corridor is the much higher Penobscot Mountain. The peak is part of a ridge descending southwesterly toward Hazelton and within sight of the western fringe of the Poconos while being located today within the incorporated boundaries of Mountain Top, Pennsylvania. Through the pass northeast and below it lies an important multi-modal transportation corridor channeling a busy railroad right of way and through which PA Route 309 and PA Route 437 funnel paralleling the pioneering railway which built the area. At one time before incorporation, Mountain Top and the saddle of the pass was known by the Amerindian name Penobscot, which name has also been given the opposite higher peak, Penobscot Mountain. Together, the peaks and pass forms part of the drainage divide between the Lehigh Valley & greater Delaware River drainage basin and the Wyoming and Susquehanna Valley, part of the Potomac River drainage basin. Because of the strong barriers of the local East-West oriented ridge lines of the local Ridge and Valley Appalachians chain, the Solomon Gap pass formed between the two peaks was one of the few places a railroad could be envisioned in the 1830s when the fuel crises in eastern cities demanded easier transportation to the Northern Anthracite Coal Fields. Ironically, the company forming the railroad which cut over 100 miles off the trip from Philadelphia to Wilkes-Barre was the same entity with a near monopoly in providing coal from the Southern Anthracite region, Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company (LC&N, f.1821), which had built both the Lehigh Canal, but also the nation's second railway, the Summit Hill & Mauch Chunk Railroad. The LC&N company seemed to relish taking on tasks which left others running, and developed the technology to make the task happen. The whole uplands north and west faces over look the Wyoming Valley from the southeastern corner near Hazleton towards and through the greater south Wilkes-Barre area. The southern and eastern slopes just give peeks into portions of the Poconos and wider views of the Lehigh Valley descending down to White Haven, for the Poconos technically are left-bank bounded by the Lehigh. The prominence of Haystack Mountain is about 1,871 feet (570 meters) above sea level, and wholly within the incorporated limits of Mountain Top where it is today, mostly surrounded by residences. In the 1870s unhappy with the navigation choke hold into the Wyoming Valley various eastern business interests had little trouble raising capital to form a competing rail company, the Lehigh Valley Railroad to challenge the LC&N operating subsidiary, Lehigh and Susquehanna Railroad (LVRR). Utilizing the advantage of new higher power locomotives, the new-fangled dynamite technology, and some clever surveying of alternative routes, the LVRR quickly built a parallel road from New Jersey, across the Delaware, and up along the Lehigh & Susquehanna's trackage all the way to the connecting junctions managed by shortline rail companies in the Avoca/Moosic area. But the LVRR also split its tracks in Mountaintop, crossed over and above the LH&S tracks onto Haystack Mountain, which branch line traversed down to Hazelton and South Wilkes-Barre, then looped back through the heart of the municipalities of Wilkes-Barre to loop back on itself. A northwestern spur connected to Buffalo, New York and ran an express service, the famous Black Diamond Express from New York City to Buffalo, through Wilkes-Barre down the slopes descending into the valley cut into Haystack Mountain's flanks. (en)
dbo:elevation 570.280800 (xsd:double)
dbo:prominence 570.280800 (xsd:double)
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Pennsylvania_Relief_1.jpg?width=300
dbo:wikiPageID 49766011 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 6425 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1101551858 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Carbon_County,_Pennsylvania dbr:Potomac_River dbr:Elevation dbr:Delaware_River dbr:Pennsylvania_Route_437 dbr:Ridge-and-Valley_Appalachians dbr:United_States dbr:United_States_Geological_Survey dbr:Penobscot_Mountain_(Pennsylvania) dbr:Mauch_Chunk_Switchback_Railway dbr:Coal_Region dbr:Mountain_Top,_Pennsylvania dbr:Appalachian_Mountains dbr:Lehigh_Canal dbr:Lehigh_Coal_&_Navigation_Company dbr:Lehigh_Valley dbr:Lehigh_Valley_Railroad dbr:Lehigh_and_Susquehanna_Railroad dbr:Mountain_pass dbr:Susquehanna_Valley dbc:Mountains_of_Pennsylvania dbr:White_Haven,_Pennsylvania dbr:Wilkes-Barre,_Pennsylvania dbr:Drainage_basin dbr:Drainage_divide dbc:Mountains_of_Luzerne_County,_Pennsylvania dbr:Hazleton,_Pennsylvania dbr:Pocono_Mountains dbr:Wyoming_Valley dbr:Saddle_(landform) dbr:PA_Route_309 dbr:Penobscot_Mountain dbr:File:Pennsylvania_Relief_1.jpg dbr:Solomon_Gap
dbp:elevationFt 1871 (xsd:integer)
dbp:name Haystack Mountain (en)
dbp:prominenceFt 1871 (xsd:integer)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Convert dbt:Coord dbt:Infobox_mountain dbt:Mountains_of_Pennsylvania dbt:Void
dct:subject dbc:Mountains_of_Pennsylvania dbc:Mountains_of_Luzerne_County,_Pennsylvania
georss:point 41.17941666666667 -75.89200555555556
rdf:type owl:Thing dbo:Place dbo:Location schema:Mountain schema:Place dbo:NaturalPlace wikidata:Q8502 geo:SpatialThing dbo:Mountain
rdfs:comment Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania), is an otherwise non-descript 1871 ft peak forming the steep southwestern faces of the mountain pass's saddle connecting and dividing the Wyoming Valley from the Lehigh Valley. The whole uplands north and west faces over look the Wyoming Valley from the southeastern corner near Hazleton towards and through the greater south Wilkes-Barre area. The southern and eastern slopes just give peeks into portions of the Poconos and wider views of the Lehigh Valley descending down to White Haven, for the Poconos technically are left-bank bounded by the Lehigh. (en)
rdfs:label Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania) (en)
owl:sameAs yago-res:Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania) wikidata:Haystack Mountain (Pennsylvania) https://global.dbpedia.org/id/2NZ8z
geo:geometry POINT(-75.89200592041 41.179416656494)
geo:lat 41.179417 (xsd:float)
geo:long -75.892006 (xsd:float)
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Haystack_Mountain_(Pennsylvania)?oldid=1101551858&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/Pennsylvania_Relief_1.jpg
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Haystack_Mountain_(Pennsylvania)
foaf:name Haystack Mountain (en)
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of dbr:Haystack_Mountain
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Penobscot_Knob dbr:Hanover_Township,_Luzerne_County,_Pennsylvania dbr:Solomon_Creek dbr:Haystack_Mountain
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Haystack_Mountain_(Pennsylvania)