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Juniata County, Pennsylvania
・ Juniata Formation
・ Juniata High School
・ Juniata Iron Works
・ Juniata River
・ Juniata Terminal Company
・ Juniata Terrace, Pennsylvania
・ Juniata Township
・ Juniata Township, Adams County, Nebraska
・ Juniata Township, Bedford County, Pennsylvania
・ Juniata Township, Blair County, Pennsylvania
・ Juniata Township, Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania
・ Juniata Township, Michigan
・ Juniata Township, Pennsylvania
・ Juniata Township, Perry County, Pennsylvania


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Juniata County, Pennsylvania : ウィキペディア英語版
Juniata County, Pennsylvania

Juniata County is a county located in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. At the 2010 census, the population was 24,636.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/42/42067.html )〕 Its county seat is Mifflintown.〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=2011-06-07 )〕 The county was created on March 2, 1831, from part of Mifflin County and named for the Juniata River.
Mountains in Juniata County include Tuscarora Mountain and Shade Mountain. Agricultural land and forested land make up most of the county's area. Major rivers and creeks in the county include the Susquehanna River, the Juniata River, Tuscarora Creek, and West Branch Mahantango Creek. It borders six other counties. The county lies over 16 different rock formations (which are from the Ordovician, Silurian, and Devonian) and 51 different soils.
Juniata County has a relatively low population density. The most population-dense parts of the county are the boroughs of Mifflintown and Mifflin. The most common races in the county are white (96.8% of all residents) and black (0.6% of all residents). Between 1940 and 2005, Juniata County's population grew faster than all but two other counties in Pennsylvania. Susquehanna Township had the fastest-growing population of any borough or township in the county during this time period. Livestock farming is the largest industry in the county, although there are other industries as well, including crop farming and tourism. Manufacturing jobs are the most common jobs in the county. The county's median household income is $34,698 per year and its median family income is $39,757 per year. The poverty rate is 9.5% and the unemployment rate is 5.4%. The median house value in the county was $87,000 in 2000. The main roads in Juniata County are Pennsylvania Route 235, Pennsylvania Route 35, Pennsylvania Route 104, U.S. Route 11/U.S. Route 15, U.S. Route 22/U.S. Route 322, Pennsylvania Route 74, Pennsylvania Route 850, and Pennsylvania Route 333.
There are four boroughs and thirteen townships in Juniata County. The county is served by two school districts: the Juniata County School District and the Greenwood School District. There are five areas in Juniata County that are protected by the Central Pennsylvania Conservancy and 59 natural heritage sites in the county.
The first settlers arrived in Juniata County in the 1750s. The county has historically been part of Mifflin County and before that, part of Cumberland County.
==History==
Juniata County was historically a part of Cumberland County and later Mifflin County.〔 Juniata County was formed on March 2, 1831, from parts of Mifflin County. It is named after the Juniata River. The word "juniata" itself is a Seneca word that means either "people of the standing stone" or "blue waters". The first boroughs in the county to be settled were Mifflintown and Thompsontown, which were settled in 1790. Port Royal and Mifflin were settled in 1812 and 1848, respectively. The first of these borough to be incorporated was Mifflintown, on March 6, 1833. The last one to be incorporated was Thompsontown, on February 7, 1868.〔 However, squatters arrived in the county and were removed from it considerably earlier, by 1750 and one of the first warrants for land in the county was issued in 1755.〔〔 Many of the earliest landowners in Delaware Township were speculators as opposed to settlers.〔 There was an Indian raid in the county in 1755 and 1756, although Fort Bingham and Fort Peterson had been constructed.〔 The Beale family was one of the earliest families to inhabit the county. More settlers arrived in the 1750s and 1760s and the first gristmill on the western side of the Juniata River was built in the county in 1767. A public road was built in the county between Tuscarora Creek and a location near Shade Mountain in 1768. John Hamilton constructed a sawmill and gristmill on Cocalamus Creek in Delaware Township in 1776. The first known physician in the county, Dr. Ezra Doty, settled in Mifflintown in 1791.〔
The first four townships in what would become Juniata County were formed on October 23, 1754. They were Lack Township, Aire Township, Fannett Township, and Tyrone Township. These early townships had no formal boundaries. By 1913, the original townships had been divided into a total of 13 townships.〔
The Pennsylvania Canal began serving Juniata County in 1826 and closed in 1900. The Pennsylvania Railroad reached the county in the late 1840s. The Tuscarora Valley Railroad was also in the county until it closed in 1934.〔
During Hurricane Agnes in 1972, a total of 6374 acres of Juniata County were flooded. 57 families were displaced during this flooding.〔
Juniata County was the last county in Pennsylvania to develop a modern comprehensive plan.〔 It did, however, construct a comprehensive plan in 1974.〔
In a 1997 survey, 66.8% of respondents found Juniata County a "very desirable" living place. In a similar survey in 2007, however, only 56.9% of respondents found the county a "very desirable" living place.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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