Tioga County, Pennsylvania
Tioga County is a county located on the central northern border of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. As of the 2010 census, the population was 41,981. Its county seat is Wellsboro. The county was created on March 26, 1804, from part of Lycoming County and later organized in 1812. It is named for the Tioga River.
History
The county was originally settled by migrants of "Yankee" stock. With the opening of a rough wagon road to the source of the Tioga River, New England settlers poured over the Allegheny Mountains. Tioga County resembled upstate New York more than it did eastern Pennsylvania, as its population primarily consisted of settlers from New England. Developers and land speculators laid out roads, established post routes, erected public buildings erected and people were invited to move there. The original settlers were entirely of New England origins or were Yankees from upstate New York, whose families had recent ancestors in New England, with migration taking place in the aftermath of the Revolutionary War. Tioga County was largely culturally contiguous with New England culture, which was influential across the Northern Tier of the United States through its migrants.In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the county accepted more immigrants from Ireland, Germany and eastern Europe, who came to work in the coal mines. A number of them were Roman Catholic, introducing more diversity into the mixture of religions here.
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of, of which is land and is water. It is the fourth-largest county in Pennsylvania by land area and fifth-largest by total area. It has a warm-summer humid continental climate and average monthly temperatures in Wellsboro range from 22.8 °F in January to 68.2 °F in July.Adjacent counties
- Steuben County, New York
- Chemung County, New York
- Bradford County
- Lycoming County
- Potter County
Demographics
There were 15,925 households out of which 30.40% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 57.80% were married couples living together, 8.60% had a female householder with no husband present, and 29.70% were non-families. 24.40% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.30% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.48 and the average family size was 2.93.
In the county, the population was spread out with 23.70% under the age of 18, 10.60% from 18 to 24, 25.40% from 25 to 44, 24.20% from 45 to 64, and 16.00% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 38 years. For every 100 females there were 95.90 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.80 males.
;Live birth rates
Tioga County's live birth rate was 524 births in 1990. The County's live birth rate in 2000 was 475 births, while by 2011 it had declined to 437 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.
;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 Tioga County was 16.3% in 2014. The statewide poverty rate was 13.6% in 2014. The 2012 childhood poverty rate by school district was: Northern Tioga School District – 44.6% living at 185% or below than the Federal Poverty Level and Southern Tioga School District – 40.6% and Wellsboro Area SD was 31.8%.
Politics and government
Tioga County is one of the most heavily Republican represented counties in Pennsylvania. This has a long history as Abraham Lincoln reportedly received 78.57% of the county's vote in the 1860 Presidential election. Since Abraham Lincoln the county has voted for the non-Republican presidential candidate only two times. The first was Theodore Roosevelt's 1912 run as a Progressive and the second was Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964. In 2004, George W. Bush received 12,019 votes to 5,437 votes for John Kerry. In 2008 John McCain received 62.7% of the vote. In 2006, Rick Santorum and Lynn Swann both had significant victories in Tioga County despite their defeats statewide. The last two sitting Board of Commissioners have been all Republican candidates, and Tioga County is the only county in Pennsylvania with all three sitting commissioners being from a single party. This was due to the success of write in campaigns conducted by Roger Bunn in 2011 and Mark Hamilton in 2015.Elected officials
United States senator
- Robert "Bob" P. Casey, Jr
- Patrick "Pat" J. Toomey
United States Congress
- Fred Keller – 12th Pennsylvania Congressional District.
Pennsylvania state senator
- Joseph B. Scarnati, III – 25th District, Pennsylvania State Senate
Pennsylvania state representative
- Clint Owlett – 68th District, Pennsylvania House of Representatives
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Departments/Commissioners/Pages/TiogaCountyBoardofCommissioners.aspx County commissioners
- , chair
- , vice-chair
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Court_of_Common_Pleas/Pages/CourtOfCommonPleas.aspx [Court of Common Pleas judge, 4th Judicial District of Pennsylvania]
- George W. Wheeler
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Court_of_Common_Pleas/Magisterial_DJ/Pages/MagisterialDJ.aspx Magisterial district judge
-
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Court_of_Common_Pleas/District%20Attorney/Pages/DistrictAttorney.aspx District attorney
- Krista Deats
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Departments/Register_Recorder/Pages/RegisterofWills_RecorderofDeeds_ClerkofOrphans'Court.aspx Register of wills / recorder of deeds
- Jane E. Wetherbee
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Departments/Prothonotary_Clerk_of_Courts/Pages/Prothonotary.aspx Prothonotary / clerk of courts
- Marie Seymour
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Departments/Register_Recorder/Pages/RegisterofWills_RecorderofDeeds_ClerkofOrphans'Court.aspx County treasurer
- Kera Hackett
http://www.tiogacountypa.us/Departments/Sheriffs_Office/Pages/Sheriff.aspx Sheriff
- Frank Levindoski
Coroner
- James L. Wilson
Auditors
- Rebecca B. Briggs
- Elizabeth T. Craig
- Amy Kane Perry
Marcellus shale impact fee
In 2016, the Pennsylvania Utility Commission lowered the Impact fee on shale gas wells.
The use of the impact shale fee funds is limited by state law to:
- Emergency preparedness and public safety.
- Road, bridge and infrastructure projects.
- Water, storm water and sewer systems and other environmental projects.
- Records management, IT.
- Tax reductions.
- Preservation and reclamation of surface and subsurface waters and water supplies.
- Projects that increase the availability of affordable housing.
- Delivery of social services.
- Judicial services.
- Career and technical centers for training of workers.
- Career and technological centers for training of workers in the oil and gas industry.
- Local or regional planning initiatives under the Pennsylvania Municipal Planning Code.
- 2013 – 672 shale wells, impact fee revenues to Tioga County – $4,363,837.90
- 2012, Tioga County had 811 natural gas wells, or 13% of the state total number of wells About only half of the wells were actually producing gas.
Education
Colleges and universities
- Mansfield University in Mansfield is a member of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
Public school districts
- Canton Area School District
- Galeton Area School District
- Northern Tioga School District
- Southern Tioga School District
- Wellsboro Area School District
Private schools
- Covington Community DCC, Covington
- Irvin Comstock Seventh-Day Adventist School, Wellsboro
- Laurel Youth Services, Blossburg
- Lauries Bright Beginnings CCC, Millerton
- Mansfield Area Nursery School, Mansfield
- Maranatha Mission Learning Community Branch 20, Trout Run
- New Covenant Academy, Mansfield
- Presbyterian Child Development Center, Wellsboro
- Stony Fork Mennonite School, Wellsboro
- Trinity Lutheran School, Wellsboro
- Toddler University, Blossburg
- Toddler University, Trinity
- Wellsboro Montessori Children's Center, Wellsboro
- Wesley Academy, Elkland
Public libraries
- Blossburg Memorial Library
- Elkland Area Community Library
- Green Free Library – Wellsboro
- Knoxville Public Library
- Mansfield Free Public Library
- Potter-Tioga County Lib System
- Westfield Public Library
Transportation
Major highways
Recreation
There are three Pennsylvania state parks in Tioga County.- Hills Creek State Park is several miles north of U.S. Route 6 between Wellsboro and Mansfield in Charleston Township.
- Colton Point State Park and Leonard Harrison State Park are both part of the Pennsylvania Grand Canyon that is carved by Pine Creek.
Communities
Boroughs
- Blossburg
- Elkland
- Knoxville
- Lawrenceville
- Liberty
- Mansfield
- Roseville
- Tioga
- Wellsboro
- Westfield
Townships
- Bloss
- Brookfield
- Charleston
- Chatham
- Clymer
- Covington
- Deerfield
- Delmar
- Duncan
- Elk
- Farmington
- Gaines
- Hamilton
- Jackson
- Lawrence
- Liberty
- Middlebury
- Morris
- Nelson
- Osceola
- Putnam
- Richmond
- Rutland
- Shippen
- Sullivan
- Tioga
- Union
- Ward
- Westfield
Census-designated places
- Arnot
- Millerton
Ghost town
- Fall Brook
Population ranking
† county seat
Rank | City/Town/etc. | Municipal type | Population |
1 | Mansfield | Borough | 3,625 |
2 | † Wellsboro | Borough | 3,263 |
3 | Elkland | Borough | 1,821 |
4 | Blossburg | Borough | 1,538 |
5 | Westfield | Borough | 1,064 |
6 | Tioga | Borough | 666 |
7 | Knoxville | Borough | 629 |
8 | Lawrenceville | Borough | 581 |
9 | Arnot | CDP | 332 |
10 | Millerton | CDP | 316 |
11 | Liberty | Borough | 249 |
12 | Roseville | Borough | 189 |