Slaba's Hill : East Main St betweeen the Miners Mill's Section of Wilkes-Barre and Plains. |
Slabtown : in Columbia County, just over the Little Mountain from Ringtown, near Ideal Park |
Slackersville : a strippin', near Beaver Brook. Dates to the 1920's, at least. |
Slocum and Slocum Corners : small villages in the mountains between Nanticoke and Hazelton |
Slope Street : lower end of Drifton, across Rte. 940. |
Smoketown : 1) across the tracks from Edgewood, on the back road to Adamsdale. Site of the casket company. Also home to the dirt-floored Smoketown Playground. 2) west of Conyngham in Luzerne County. Going down Rte 93 about a quarter of a mile up from Conyngham Builders, it was to the west of the highway. Existed at the turn of the century, but the town has not been around for many years. |
Snyders : south of Tamaqua. Located about 4 miles from Clamtown, near New Ringgold. |
Spring Crest : just south of Fountain Springs, on Route 61 |
Spring Side : part of Locust Gap, south of Rte 901 |
Springfield : section of Coal Township/Shamokin, behind the Ames store on Rte 61 on the hill |
Stable Row : runs parallel to Long Row in Gilberton |
Stearns Station : a group of 8 double block homes and one single home for the colliery superintendent. The patch was owned by the Susquehanna Colliery #6 shaft. Located in Newport Twp, about 3 miles from Nanticoke. (About half way between Nanticoke and Glen Lyon.) This patch was razed sometime in the 1950's to allow the land to be strip mined. |
Steckley's Corner : near Deep Creek and Weishample in Barry Twp, Schuylkill County. |
Stein's Mill : before Branchdale on Rte. 209 |
Still Creek : between Hometown And McAdoo. Where "Walt's Drive-In" is (soft ice cream and a bucket of balls). Also known as Ginthers. |
Stockton 6,7,8 : patches between Freeland and Hazleton |
Stockton Mines : between Ebervale and Hazleton. Follow East Diamond Ave toward Freeland. |
Stony Point : Spruce Street in western Mahanoy City adjacent to the West End ball park (later auto race track) and the old Mahanoy schoolhouse. |
Store Patch : near Lost Creek. As you come into Lost Creek from Shenandoah, go straight instead of turning to the right where St. Mary's church used to be. |
Storm Hill : a row of company homes (near some culm banks) on Rte 309/115, just about where the large shopping center with Price Chopper, Pharmoor, Hometown Buffet, etc. now stands. The houses were in very bad shape; torn down probably in the late 1950's. |
Strong : on Route 61, between Atlas and Kulpmont |
Suscon : Between Dupont and Bear Creek. "Where the screamer howls"???? |
Suffolk : another name for St. Nicholas patch. |
Sugar Notch : (aka "The Notch") in Luzerne County |
Summit Hill : on Sharpe's Mountain, between Mauch Chunk and Lansford. Founded in 1892 by Philip Ginther. Coal was discovered in this town in the 1880's and helped launch the area's coal mining industry. Summit Hill was once in "Ripley's Believe It or Not" because it had one block that had a church on each of the four corners, facing the four directions of the world. One of the churches was converted into a bar - St. Gabriel's Italian Club. |
Summit Station : outside of Auburn, in Schuylkill County. At the intersection of Rte 183 and Rte 895. Just south of Lake Wynonah. Location of the Schuylkill County Fairgrounds. |
Sunnyside : on Route 61, south of Paxinos |
Swamp Poodle : (pronounced "Shwamp Poodle") near Forestville; this town no longer exists. |
Swatara : west of Branchdale and south-east of Newtown, in the corner created by Rte 209 and Rte 25. Swatara Creek starts here. The Swatara Coal Company still digs here today, though no one lives here anymore. Supposedly you can find foundations and collapsing buildings in the forest. |
Sweet Island : somewhere near Minersville. Anyone know where this is? |
Swoyersville : take Rte 11 into Forty-Fort and turn onto Slocum Street. Follow Slocum Street until you reach the top of it. At the top, you will be turning right onto Main Street, Swoyersville. (also known as; "The Back Road") Only about thirty yards on the right is where the Harry E breaker stood (torn down in the late 1990's). Swoyersville was at one time home to several coal breakers. Directly across the street was an old dirt road that used to lead to Hollywood Patch. |