Under siege in the 1960s, The Gazette and Daily in York started from square one with a front page editorial. The newspaper drew the wrath of Republicans when it refused to accept advertising from GOP presidential candidate Barry Goldwater.
In the 1700s, Washington Township’s Bermudian Valley hosted a settlement with ties to the Ephrata Cloister.
Community leader Dr. George Bowles helped in the formation of the Crispus Attucks Community Center in 1931
Over 600 people are buried in the City Cemetery located in North York. However, there are no headstones for this potter's field. Instead, they rest in nameless graves, forgotten yet together.
York's City Market, demolished in 1963, was the most architecturally significant building to come down in the city in the 1950s to 1970s era.
Congregants, past and present, gathered in 2015 for the 50th anniversary of the merger of Faith Presbyterian Church in York with First Presbyterian Church.
The Carlisle Livestock Market has sold its last chicken. For those still involved in agriculture, this will mean a change in how they do business.
The Spangler Farm, a restored Civil War field hospital, testifies to the horrors of the Battle of Gettysburg.
Jane Keenheel, born into slavery, stitched a quilt made from salesman suit swatches. Her legacy of resourcefulness inspires others today in the textile industry.
When Jose Hernandez and his wife, Gloria, arrived in York in 1958, they became pioneers in York County's Latino community.