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Apollo, PA

Apollo, Pennsylvania
Borough
Apollo 11 Memorial
Apollo 11 Memorial
Apollo is located in Pennsylvania
Apollo
Apollo
Coordinates: 40°35′03″N 79°33′52″W / 40.58417°N 79.56444°W / 40.58417; -79.56444Coordinates: 40°35′03″N 79°33′52″W / 40.58417°N 79.56444°W / 40.58417; -79.56444
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
County Armstrong
Settled 1816
Incorporated 1848
Government
 • Mayor Rich Dixon
Area
 • Total 0.3 sq mi (0.9 km2)
 • Land 0.3 sq mi (0.8 km2)
 • Water 0.04 sq mi (0.1 km2)
Elevation 820 ft (250 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 1,647
 • Density 5,395/sq mi (2,083.0/km2)
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Zip code 15613
Area code(s) 724 Exchange: 478
Website apollopa.org

Apollo is a borough in Armstrong County, Pennsylvania, United States, 35 miles (56 km) northeast of Pittsburgh in a former coal-mining region. Apollo was settled in 1790, laid out in 1816, and incorporated as a borough in 1848. The population was 1,647 at the 2010 census.

The area was sectioned in 1769, following the Treaty of Fort Stanwix, as a farm known as "Warren's Sleeping Place", named after a Native American trader from the area named Edward Warren. It was soon surveyed and divided into lots, with the town of Warren officially being added to the Greensburg register on November 9, 1816. The log cabin home of the Drake family still stands in the area, and is one of the oldest buildings in Armstrong County.

With the introduction of the post office, the area was officially renamed from Warren to Apollo in 1848 to avoid confusion with the post office of another town in Pennsylvania of the same name.

By the late 19th century the Apollo Iron & Steel Company dominated the local economy. In 1895, the company's president, George Gibson McMurtry, hired famous landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted to design a town for Apollo Iron & Steel's workers. The result was the neighboring town of Vandergrift. In 1911, Apollo became home to the first public library in Armstrong County.

The Roaring Run Recreation Area is located one mile upriver (southeast) of Apollo and can be accessed via the Apollo Kiski River Trail. Stone remnants of the Western Division of the Pennsylvania Mainline Canal, that passed through Apollo and operated between 1825-1850, can be found along the Roaring Run Trail. The canal made use of the Kiskiminetas River using a system of slackwater dams, and the boats floated on the river, entering a lock located at the mouth of Roaring Run. From there the canal ran along the path of the current Roaring Run Trail, through the entire length of the borough, entering the Kiskiminetas River again across the river from where the current borough of East Vandergrift is situated.


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