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  1. New Hope ist ein Borough in Solebury Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Das U.S. Census Bureau hat bei der Volkszählung 2020 eine Einwohnerzahl von 2.612 ermittelt. Die Stadt liegt an der Westseite des Delaware River. Auf der anderen Seite des Flusses liegt Lambertville, New Jersey.

  2. New Hope is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 2,612 at the 2020 census. New Hope is located approximately 30 mi (48 km) north of Philadelphia, and lies on the west bank of the Delaware River at its confluence with Aquetong Creek.

  3. Die New Hope Railroad (NHRR), früher auch New Hope and Ivyland Railroad genannt, ist eine US-amerikanische Class 3 Güter- und Museumsbahn mit Sitz in New Hope (Pennsylvania). Sie betreibt sowohl mit Diesel- als auch Dampflokomotiven und historische Personenwagen eine 28 Kilometer lange Strecke zwischen New Hope und Warminster .

  4. History of New Hope. Nearly ten thousand years ago the Lenni-Lenape Native Americans carved their way from the Delaware River in what is now Philadelphia through richly wooded forests seeking land for planting, forests for hunting and water for fishing. Many of them settled on about 1,000 acres in what is now New Hope, Pennsylvania.

  5. 23. Mai 2024 · New Hope, borough (town) and artists’ colony, Bucks county, southeastern Pennsylvania, U.S. It lies in a scenic wooded region along the west bank of the Delaware River (there bridged to Lambertville, New Jersey), 33 miles (53 km) north-northeast of Philadelphia. The site, originally called Wells Ferry and later Canby’s Ferry and ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. New Hope is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 2,612 at the 2020 census. [2] New Hope is 30 mi (48 km) north of Philadelphia. It is on the west bank of the Delaware River .

  7. New Hope got its start because of the two things that drove its economy throughout its first two centuries: transportation and water power. Indeed, during the time of William Penn, a thousand acres of land were surveyed for a man named Robert Heath in 1700, covering the site of present-day New Hope.