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It is a great place to live, work and play!!!!!
- Formed February 9, 1796; named for General Nathanael Greene. Surface, fertile valleys, hills, and rolling uplands, making a region of natural beauty, well watered from the tributaries of the Monongahela River and Wheeling Creek.
- The County has a rich and diverse history that can still be seen throughout the County, whether in the rural countryside, boroughs, or coal patch towns.
- There are still a number of covered wooden bridges throughout the county, from fifty to a hundred years old, a very old double bridge crosses Ten Mile Creek, one mile east of Waynesburg; formerly an old forge and furnace were on this creek.
- Many Indian village sites that were occupied long before the advent of the whites are here; their age is indicated by large old trees growing on their mounds; three distinct forms of ancient burial are found here, showing that three waves of population swept over this land before the coming of the Europeans.
- Early industries in Greene County were mining and agriculture. Gas wells, coal mining, and wool production provided the early forms of income in Greene County. At one point the wool industry was so prosperous that the County was the first overall in total Merino wool production and was said to have more sheep than human inhabitants county-wide.
- Long-running annual events provide the citizens of the County with recreational and social events that build a strong sense of community County-wide. It is through these social gatherings that the identity and character of Greene County is strengthened and relationships and family ties are cemented.
- Our County's fall foliage has always been a major attraction with the foliage at its peak in mid-October.
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Facts about the county:
- Greene County' is situated in the extreme southwestern corner of Pennsylvania It is considered the cornerstone of the keystone state.
- 89.2 percent rural; with a population of about 40,000+ residents.
- The county seat for Greene County is within the Borough of Waynesburg, located at exit 14 of Interstate 79, about 60 miles south of Pittsburgh.
- It is 389,120 square acres of surface, or about 608 square miles. The average length east to west is 32 miles and the width is about 19 miles.
- The terrain is hilly with the general trend of the hills from northwest to southwest.
- Many streams drain the slopes. The surface is drained by the Monongahela River, which unites with the Allegheny at Pittsburgh and forms the Ohio proper, and by the Wheeling River which also falls into the Ohio, and forms part of the great Mississippi.
- Greene County is designated as a sixth class county (population of 45,000 to 94,999).
- Greene County is made up of 26 municipalities (20 Townships and 6 Boroughs). The largest municipality being Franklin Township.
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