Along the Greenbelt: About Fort Hunter
Named for a fort the British built on the site in 1756, archeological digs on the property found Native American artifacts going back 9,000 years.
A series of articles by Bill Cologie, Harrisburg resident.
Named for a fort the British built on the site in 1756, archeological digs on the property found Native American artifacts going back 9,000 years.
Learn about the railroad bridges that crossed the Susquehanna here, including the world’s largest stone arch bridge and one started in 1885 that was never completed.
Located at 27 N. Front Street and designed by the architect of our Capitol, this house could have a sign that says “The Marquis de Lafayette Slept Here.”
Located where the Greenbelt crosses Route 441, this treasure is designed to engage all your senses.
One of the world’s oldest rivers – 250 million years older than the Nile – is the longest river on the East Coast and America’s longest non-navigable river.
These homes were built in 1906 and some were occupied by workers at the Elliot Fisher Typewriter Company, just north of where the Greenbelt crosses Cameron St.
The “People’s Bridge” was built in 1890. The iron came from a company that provided some of the PRR’s original rails and the iron for the Eiffel Tower.
Just east of 19 th Street, the Memorial is only reachable on the Greenbelt. The dominant feature is an eleven-foot, black granite obelisk.
The “People’s Bridge” was built in 1890. The iron came from a company that provided some of the PRR’s original rails and the iron for the Eiffel Tower.
Created on Harrisburg’s highest point in 1845, the three reservoirs there hold 42 million gallons of water that is still gravity fed to the City’s residents.