Founded in May of 1949 by Joseph N. and Anita Garlick, the Joseph N. Garlick Funeral Home Inc. exclusively serves the Jewish community - providing you with unsurpassed knowledge and expertise regarding Jewish Funeral rites, cemeteries and customs.
Funeral Homes in Lackawaxen, PA
Places
Below you fill find all funeral homes and cemeteries in or near Lackawaxen.
Zip codes in the city: 18435.
Pike County funeral flowers can be purchased from one of the local funeral shops we partner with.
On May 27, 1941, Carmine J. (C.J.) Parise received his undertaker's license, as it was called back then by the state of Pennsylvania. Carmine's interest in the funeral profession was inspired by his uncle, Jacob B. Graziano, who was the first...
Nearby Funeral Homes for Lackawaxen
Dunmore, PA 18512
Jessup, PA 18434
Cresco, PA 18326
Carbondale, PA 18407
Jermyn, PA 18433
Dunmore, PA 18512
Dunmore, PA 18512
Port Jervis, NY 12771
Barryville, NY 12719
Barryville, NY 12719
Liberty, NY 12754
Livingston Manor, NY 12758
Monticello, NY 12751
Monticello, NY 12701
Throop, PA 18512
Forest City, PA 18421
Carbondale, PA 18407
Monticello, NY 12751
Kauneonga Lake, NY 12749
Liberty, NY 12754
Carbondale, PA 18407
Moscow, PA 18444
Jeffersonville, NY 12748
Callicoon, NY 12723
Monticello, NY 12751
Olyphant, PA 18447
Facts about the city
Lackawaxen Township is the largest and northernmost township in Pike County, Pennsylvania. The population was 4,994 at the 2010 census. The Delaware River, which marks the eastern boundary of the township, joins the Lackawaxen River at Lackawaxen Village. The housing communities Fawn Lake Forest and Masthope Mountain are in the township.
Lackawaxen Obituaries
There are no obituaries in our database for this location.
History
The first permanent European settlers in the area were Jonathan Conkling and John Barnes in 1770. Logs were floated to market in Easton, Pennsylvania or Trenton, New Jersey In 1829, the Delaware and Hudson Canal began operating between Honesdale, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania and Kingston, New York New York. The canal linked New York City with the rich coal deposits of the Carbondale, Pennsylvania Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and Scranton, Pennsylvania areas, providing fuel for the city's foundries and residential areas. Roebling's Delaware Aqueduct, built by John A. Tools, pot shards and bone fragments have been found at Indian rock shelters and camp sites.
The official website for the city of Lackawaxen is http://www.lackawaxen.org/.
News
There is no news for this location at this time.