Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania
Lackawanna County is a county in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. As of the 2010 census, the population was 214,437. Its county seat and largest city is Scranton.
The county was created on August 13, 1878, following decades of trying to gain its independence from Luzerne County. It is Pennsylvania's last county to be created. It is named for the Lackawanna River.
Lackawanna County is included in the Scranton–Wilkes-Barre–Hazleton, PA Metropolitan Statistical Area. It is the second-largest county within the metropolitan area. It lies northwest of the Pocono Mountains. Lackawanna County is located approximately from the New Jersey border in Montague, New Jersey, and also located approximately from upstate New York in Windsor, New York.
History
Lackawanna County is a region that was developed for iron production and anthracite coal mining in the nineteenth century, with its peak of coal production reached in the mid-20th century. Scranton, then still part of Luzerne County, became a center of mining and industry. It was the site of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company, which later began to produce steel using the Bessemer process. In 1877 at the time of the Scranton General Strike, the company was managed by William Walker Scranton, whose father had been president until his death in 1872. Two of his cousins had been founders of the company and the city.The county was created on August 13, 1878, following decades of trying to gain its independence from Luzerne County. It is Pennsylvania's last county to be created. It is named for the Lackawanna River.
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of, of which is land and is water. It has a humid continental climate which is warm-summer except along the Lackawanna River from Olyphant and Blakely below Peckville on down and along the Susquehanna where it is hot-summer. Average monthly temperatures in downtown Scranton range from 26.0 °F in January to 71.9 °F in July, in Carbondale they range from 23.8 °F in January to 69.7 °F in July, and in Moscow they range from 22.6 °F in January to 68.4 °F in July.Adjacent counties
- Susquehanna County
- Wayne County
- Monroe County
- Luzerne County
- Wyoming County
Major Highways
Demographics
As of the 2010 census, there were 214,437 people living in the county. 92.0% were White, 2.5% Black or African American, 1.7% Asian, 0.2% Native American, 2.0% of some other race and 1.5% of two or more races. 5.0% were Hispanic or Latino. 20.1% identified as of Italian, 19.9% Irish, 13.0% Polish and 11.4% German ancestry.As of the census of 2000, there were 213,295 people, 86,218 households, and 55,783 families living in the county. The population density was 465 people per square mile. There were 95,362 housing units at an average density of 208 per square mile. The racial makeup of the county was 96.65% White, 1.31% Black or African American, 0.09% Native American, 0.75% Asian, 0.01% Pacific Islander, 0.53% from other races, and 0.66% from two or more races. 1.39% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race. 22.5% were of Italian, 21.2% Irish, 15.4% Polish and 10.2% German ancestry.
There were 86,218 households out of which 27.2% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 48.9% were married couples living together, 11.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.3% were non-families; 31.3% of all households were made up of individuals and 15.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.38 and the average family size was 3.00.
In the county, 21.8% of the population was under the age of 18, 8.9% from 18 to 24, 26.4% from 25 to 44, 23.5% from 45 to 64, and 19.5% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females, there were 89.30 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 85.4 males.
;County poverty demographics:
According to research by The Center for Rural Pennsylvania, which is a legislative agency of the Pennsylvania General Assembly, the poverty rate for County was 15.4% in 2014. The statewide poverty rate was 13.6% in 2014. The 2012 childhood poverty rate by school district was: Abington Heights School District - 15.5% living at 185% or below than the Federal Poverty Level; Carbondale Area School District - 64.7%; Dunmore School District - 33.8%; Lakeland School District - 29.2%; Mid Valley School District - 49.2%; North Pocono School District - 31.3%; Old Forge School District - 41.7%; Riverside School District - 43.4%; Scranton School District - 63.7%; and Valley View School District - 29.4%.
;Birth rate
According to the Pennsylvania Department of Health, Lackawanna County's live birth rate was 2,664 births in 1990. The county's live birth rate in 2000 was 2,148 births, while in 2011 it had increased to 2,200 babies. Over the past 50 years, rural Pennsylvania saw a steady decline in both the number and proportion of residents under 18 years old. In 1960, 1.06 million rural residents, or 35 percent of the rural population, were children.
Politics and government
Year | Republican | Democratic | Third parties |
2016 | 46.3% 48,384 | 49.8% 51,983 | 3.9% 4,037 |
2012 | 35.7% 35,085 | 62.9% 61,838 | 1.5% 1,428 |
2008 | 36.4% 39,488 | 62.2% 67,520 | 1.4% 1,531 |
2004 | 42.3% 44,766 | 56.3% 59,573 | 1.4% 1,480 |
2000 | 36.4% 35,096 | 59.6% 57,471 | 4.0% 3,814 |
1996 | 32.6% 26,930 | 56.1% 46,377 | 11.3% 9,374 |
1992 | 35.2% 33,443 | 47.4% 45,054 | 17.4% 16,471 |
1988 | 47.4% 42,083 | 51.4% 45,591 | 1.2% 1,067 |
1984 | 50.6% 48,132 | 48.2% 45,851 | 1.3% 1,202 |
1980 | 46.4% 44,242 | 47.4% 45,257 | 6.2% 5,948 |
1976 | 42.2% 43,354 | 56.1% 57,685 | 1.7% 1,758 |
1972 | 56.1% 58,838 | 43.4% 45,465 | 0.5% 566 |
1968 | 38.8% 44,388 | 58.0% 66,297 | 3.2% 3,706 |
1964 | 26.2% 31,272 | 73.7% 88,131 | 0.1% 137 |
1960 | 38.3% 49,636 | 61.7% 80,098 | 0.0% 49 |
1956 | 53.6% 64,386 | 46.4% 55,741 | 0.1% 79 |
1952 | 48.7% 61,644 | 51.2% 64,926 | 0.1% 147 |
1948 | 41.4% 46,283 | 57.7% 64,495 | 0.9% 971 |
1944 | 44.3% 47,261 | 55.5% 59,190 | 0.1% 127 |
1940 | 43.4% 54,931 | 56.3% 71,343 | 0.3% 411 |
1936 | 38.3% 51,186 | 60.2% 80,585 | 1.5% 2,030 |
1932 | 45.2% 34,632 | 53.3% 40,793 | 1.5% 1,135 |
1928 | 46.9% 46,510 | 53.1% 52,665 | 0.1% 94 |
1924 | 60.4% 37,708 | 27.0% 16,859 | 12.6% 7,834 |
1920 | 60.6% 40,593 | 36.7% 24,581 | 2.8% 1,866 |
1916 | 50.8% 17,658 | 45.3% 15,727 | 4.0% 1,373 |
1912 | 11.6% 3,799 | 37.8% 12,423 | 50.7% 16,661 |
1908 | 53.4% 18,590 | 44.4% 15,451 | 2.2% 747 |
1904 | 64.5% 19,923 | 32.6% 10,068 | 2.8% 876 |
1900 | 51.6% 16,763 | 45.3% 14,728 | 3.1% 1,019 |
1896 | 59.3% 18,737 | 37.6% 11,869 | 3.2% 999 |
1892 | 48.4% 10,729 | 46.7% 10,351 | 5.0% 1,098 |
1888 | 48.5% 10,279 | 46.5% 9,858 | 5.0% 1,058 |
at Lackawanna County Courthouse
As of November 2010, there are 146,383 registered voters in Lackawanna County.
- Democratic: 96,471
- Republican: 38,297
- Other parties and independents: 11,615
On the state and national levels, Lackawanna County has strongly favored the Democratic Party for the last ninety years. While it leaned Republican from 1896 to 1924, only failing to back William Howard Taft during that in timespan when the party's vote was split between him and former president Theodore Roosevelt. The county has only primarily voted for the Republican candidate three times since 1928: in the national Republican landslides of 1956, 1972, and 1984.
In 2000 Democrat Al Gore won 60% of the vote and Republican George W. Bush won 36%. In 2004 Democrat John Kerry received 56% of the vote and Bush received 42%. In 2006, Democrats Governor Ed Rendell and Senator Bob Casey, Jr., won 70% and 73% of the vote in Lackawanna County, respectively. In 2008 three of four Democrats running statewide carried the county, with Barack Obama receiving 63% of the county vote to 37% for John McCain. In 2016 the county swung dramatically and unexpectedly against the Democrats, with Hillary Clinton becoming the first Democrat to receive less than 50% of the vote in the county since her husband Bill Clinton in 1992, though that result was significantly affected by a strong showing by Reform Party candidate Ross Perot. Donald Trump comparatively outperformed George H.W. Bush's showing in 1992 by slightly over eleven percent as he became the first Republican to carry Pennsylvania nationally since Bush in 1988.
County commissioners
Jerry Notarianni, DemocratDebi Domenick, Democrat
Chris Chermak, Republican
Other county offices
- Clerk of Judicial Records – Mauri B. Kelly, Democrat
- Controller – Gary DiBileo, Democrat
- Coroner – Timothy Rowland, Democrat
- District Attorney – Mark Powell, Democrat
- Recorder of Deeds – Evie Rafalko-McNulty, Democrat
- Register of Wills – Frances Kovaleski, Democrat
- Sheriff – Mark McAndrew, Democrat
- Treasurer – Edward Karpovich, Democrat
State representatives
- Kyle Mullins, Democrat
- Marty Flynn, Democrat
- Bridget Kosierowski, Democrat
- Karen Boback, Republican - Benton, La Plume, and West Abington Townships; and Dalton Borough
- Mike Carroll, Democrat
United States representatives
- Matt Cartwright, Democrat, Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district
United States senator
- Robert Casey, Democrat
- Pat Toomey, Republican
Marcellus shale impact fee
- 2013 - 1 shale well, impact fee revenues to Lackawanna County - $211,525.71
Education
Colleges and universities
- Clarks Summit University
- Johnson College
- Keystone College
- Lackawanna College
- Marywood University
- Penn State Scranton
- Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine
- University of Scranton
Public school districts
- Abington Heights School District
- Carbondale Area School District
- Dunmore School District
- Forest City Regional School District
- Lackawanna Trail School District
- Lakeland School District
- Mid Valley School District
- North Pocono School District
- Old Forge School District
- Riverside School District
- Scranton School District
- Valley View School District
Charter schools
- Fell Charter Elementary School, Simpson, GR K-8
- Howard Gardner Multiple Intelligence Charter School, Scranton, GR PreK-8
- Scranton School for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children – public charter school offering pre-K through 12th-grade education to eligible deaf and hard-of-hearing children located in South Abington Township, Pennsylvania
Public vocational technology schools
- Career Technology Center of Lackawanna County
Intermediate unit
Diocesan schools
The county is also served by the Diocese of Scranton. The Diocese of Scranton operates four regional systems of diocesan schools, which were established after the area received hundreds of thousands of Catholic immigrants. The Holy Cross School System serves Lackawanna County, and is currently composed of seven elementary centers and one secondary center. The Holy Cross System is the second-largest of the four systems, and Holy Cross High School is the only diocesan high school operating a capacity. The Holy Cross System is the result of diocese-wide consolidations made in 2007 in response to decades of declining enrollment as population declined in the area.As recently as 2000, Lackawanna County was home to four Catholic high schools and nearly fifteen elementary schools. While the current configuration of sites and schools educates a fraction of the students once enrolled in Catholic schools in Lackawanna County, vast improvements have been made to the curriculum. Millions of dollars of capital gains have been invested in the buildings and technologies of the schools. As part of the ongoing effort to stabilize enrollment and offer a sustainable school system which is "spiritually sound and academically excellent", the Holy Cross System is embarking on a more aggressive advertising campaign to promote Catholic education and establish stronger and more diverse programs at the elementary level.
Sacred Heart Elementary in Carbondale and Marian Catholic Elementary in Scranton were closed in 2011 and were incorporated into LaSalle Academy and All Saint's Academy, respectively. This cut the costs of sustaining two faculties and buildings which collectively operated at less than 50% capacity. It bolstered the enrollments of the hubs of elementary education.
- Holy Cross High School, Dunmore
- Our Lady of Peace Elementary, Clarks Green
- St. Mary of Mount Carmel Elementary, Dunmore
- LaSalle Academy, Dickson City and Jessup
- All Saints Academy, Scranton
- St. Clare/St. Paul Elementary, Scranton
Private schools
- Abington Christian School, Clarks Green, GR PreK-8
- Bais Yaakov of Scranton, GR 9-12
- DePaul School for Dyslexia, Scranton
- Friendship House
- Geneva Christian School, Olyphant, GR PreK-8
- Giant Steps Child Development Center – Carbondale
- Kinder Kampus Preparatory Preschool, Archbald, PreK
- Little People Daycare School, Scranton, GR PreK-KG
- Lourdesmont School, Scranton, Special Education
- Lutheran Academy – Scranton, GR PreK-6
- Marywood – Tony Damiano Early Childhood Center, Scranton, GR PreK-KG
- Milton Eisner Yeshiva High School, Scranton, GR 9-12
- Montessori Kindergarten, Scranton, GR PreK-KG
- New Story, Throop, Special Education
- NHS Autism School, Scranton, Special Education
- Northeast Child Care Services – Archbald
- Pocono Mountain Bible Conference – Gouldsboro
- Revival Baptist Christian School, Scranton, GR K-12
- Scranton Hebrew Day School, Scranton, GR K-8
- Scranton Preparatory School, Scranton, GR 9-12
- St. Gregory's Early Childhood Center, Clarks Green, GR PreK-KG
- St. Stanislaus Elementary School, Scranton, GR K-8
- Summit Christian Academy, South Abington Township, PreK-12
- Triboro Christian Academy, Old Forge, K-12, It participates in the state's Pennsylvania System of School Assessment annual testing
Libraries
- Abington Community Library – Clarks Summit
- Carbondale Public Library – Carbondale
- Children's Library – Scranton
- Dalton Community Library – Dalton
- Nancy Kay Holmes Branch – Scranton
- North Pocono Public Library – Moscow
- Scranton Public Library – Scranton
- Taylor Community Library – Taylor
- Valley Community Library – Peckville
- Waverly Memorial Library – Waverly
Recreation
- Montage Mountain Ski Area
- Lackawanna State Park
- Archbald Pothole State Park
- The Dick and Nancy Eales Preserve at Moosic Mountain
- Pinchot Trail System
- Lackawanna River Heritage Trail
- Lake Scranton Walking Trail
- PNC Field
- Merli-Sarnoski Park
- Nay Aug Park
- McDade Park
- Aylesworth Park
- Covington Park
Communities
Cities
- Carbondale
- Scranton
Boroughs
- Archbald
- Blakely
- Clarks Green
- Clarks Summit
- Dalton
- Dickson City
- Dunmore
- Jermyn
- Jessup
- Mayfield
- Moosic
- Moscow
- Old Forge
- Olyphant
- Taylor
- Throop
- Vandling
Townships
- Benton
- Carbondale
- Clifton
- Covington
- Elmhurst
- Fell
- Glenburn
- Greenfield
- Jefferson
- La Plume
- Madison
- Newton
- North Abington
- Ransom
- Roaring Brook
- Scott
- South Abington
- Spring Brook
- Thornhurst
- Waverly
- West Abington
Census-designated places
- Big Bass Lake
- Chinchilla
- Eagle Lake
- Glenburn
- Mount Cobb
- Simpson
- Waverly
Unincorporated communities
- Daleville
- Milwaukee
- Minooka
- Winton
Population ranking
† county seat
Rank | City/Town/etc. | Municipal type | Population |
1 | † Scranton | City | 76,089 |
2 | Dunmore | Borough | 14,057 |
3 | Carbondale | City | 8,891 |
4 | Old Forge | Borough | 8,313 |
5 | Archbald | Borough | 6,984 |
6 | Blakely | Borough | 6,564 |
7 | Taylor | Borough | 6,263 |
8 | Dickson City | Borough | 6,070 |
9 | Moosic | Borough | 5,719 |
10 | Olyphant | Borough | 5,151 |
11 | Clarks Summit | Borough | 5,116 |
12 | Jessup | Borough | 4,676 |
13 | Throop | Borough | 4,088 |
14 | Jermyn | Borough | 2,169 |
15 | Chinchilla | CDP | 2,098 |
16 | Moscow | Borough | 2,026 |
17 | Mayfield | Borough | 1,807 |
18 | Mount Cobb | CDP | 1,799 |
19 | Clarks Green | Borough | 1,476 |
20 | Simpson | CDP | 1,275 |
21 | Big Bass Lake | CDP | 1,270 |
22 | Dalton | Borough | 1,234 |
23 | Glenburn | CDP | 953 |
24 | Vandling | Borough | 751 |
25 | Waverly | CDP | 604 |
26 | Eagle Lake | CDP | 12 |