Aerial view. Bethlehem Steel Corporation now operates the ore banks that once supplied the Cornwall cold blast furnaces. The furnace, founded in 1742, supplied George Washington's Continental Army with munitions and cannon. Such minerals as iron ore, gold, silver and copper are still recovered there. Photo courtesy Lebanon Valley Tourist Bureau.
Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission sign at Cornwall Furnace. Cornwall Furnace comprises the vestiges of the oldest blast furnace in America. It is virtually intact following its closure about 1880.
Inside the Cornwall cold blast furnace, showing the early cannon and shot cast during the Revolutionary War, for George Washington's Continental Army. The General and the Marquis de Lafayette often visited here. Photo courtesy Lebanon Valley Tourist Bureau.
Corner of a log house in Shaefferstown. This mode of corner construction is very rare. The horisontal logs are tennoned into a vertical corner post. This building is no longer standing.
Marker erected by Pennsylvania Historical Commission in 1930 at Trinity Reformed Church, Richland, Lebanon County, to commemorate the one red rose given every year to the heirs of Caspar Wistar for his donation of 100 acres of land to build the church.