Bala-Cynwyd (Pa.)

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  • Place
| מספר מערכת 987007567159005171
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
באלה-סינוויד (פנסילבניה)
Name (Latin)
Bala-Cynwyd (Pa.)
Coordinates
-75.2342 -75.2342 40.0075 40.0075 (gooearth )
W0751403 W0751403 N0400027 N0400027 (geonames )
Associated country
United States
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 134437227
Wikidata: Q804572
Library of congress: n 85063840
OCoLC: oca01380831
Old Aleph NLI id: 7649
Sources of Information
  • A.N. Richards Symp. (26th : 1985 : Bala-Cynwyd, Pa.). Leukotrienes in cardiovascular and pulmonary function, 1985:
  • Rand McNally commercial atlas ... 1984:
Wikipedia description:

Bala Cynwyd ( BAL-ə KIN-wuud) is a community and census-designated place in Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania, United States. It is located on the Philadelphia Main Line in Southeastern Pennsylvania and borders the western edge of Philadelphia at U.S. Route 1 (City Avenue). The present-day community was originally two separate towns, Bala and Cynwyd, but was united as a singular community largely because the U.S. Post Office, the Bala Cynwyd branch, served both towns using ZIP Code 19004. The combining of the communities gives a total population of 9,285 as of the 2020 census. The community was long known as hyphenated Bala-Cynwyd. Bala and Cynwyd are currently served by separate stations on SEPTA's Cynwyd Line of Regional Rail. Bala Cynwyd lies in the Welsh Tract of Pennsylvania and was settled in the 1680s by Welsh Quakers, who named it after the town of Bala and the village of Cynwyd in Wales. A mixed residential community made up predominantly of single-family detached homes, it extends west of the Philadelphia city limits represented by City Avenue from Old Lancaster Road at 54th Street west to Meeting House Lane and then along Manayunk and Conshohocken State Roads north to Mary Watersford Road, then east along Belmont Avenue back to City. This large residential district contains some of Lower Merion's oldest and finest stone mansions, built mainly from 1880 through the 1920s and located in the sycamore-lined district between Montgomery Avenue and Levering Mill Road, as well as split level tract houses built east of Manayunk Road just after World War II.

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