Lawrenceville is a borough in Tioga County, in the Northern Tier of Pennsylvania. The population is just under 600. Lawrenceville was named afteer Commodore John Lawrence of the U.S. Navy.
Lawrenceville is on the state's border with New York. U.S. Route 15 once went through the borough, and now utilizes an expressway that bypasses to the west. This expressway will become I-99 when completed all the way to Painted Post, New York.
The Judge John Ryon House, on Main Street. The house was built in 1840.
Houses on Main Street.
A little bank building on Main Street in the heart of the borough.
A mural on the side of a little commercial building on Main Street at Cowanesque Street, in the center of the borough.
The town post office, on Main Street.
Gas stations on the old U.S. 15 right adjacent to the border offer gasoline at Pennsylvania prices for people living in New York or heading into that state.
A sign on the old U.S. Route 15 welcomes people into Pennsylvania. The road becomes Main Street as it passes through town.
The other side of the sign welcomes people to New York as they head north from the center of town.
A house on Main Street.
The James Ford House, on Cowanesque Street. The house was built in 1831 by former Congressman James Ford for his son.
A house on Cowanesque Street.
A house on Cowanesque Street.
A house on Mechanic Street.
Houses on James Street.
Houses on State Street.
A house at Mechanic & State Streets.
The Bostwick Perry Memorial Library, on Cherry Street.
A house on Mechanic Street.
The Tioga River is the eastern boundary of the borough, and flows north to the Chemung River, where that river continues on past Corning and Elmira in New York.
A border marker on the eastern banks of the Tioga River, where Mechanic Street leaves Lawrenceville.