Jenners, Pennsylvania References External links Navigation menuwww.jfklibrary.orgJenners, Pennsylvania on...

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Unincorporated communities in Somerset County, PennsylvaniaUnincorporated communities in PennsylvaniaWestern Pennsylvania geography stubs


unincorporated communityJenner TownshipSomerset CountyPennsylvaniaJohnstown, PennsylvaniaJennerstown, PennsylvaniaBoswell, PennsylvaniaNorth Star School DistrictJenner Township, PennsylvaniaJoseph DarbyAbu GhraibProfile in Courage AwardAbu Ghraib




Jenners is an unincorporated community in Jenner Township, Somerset County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is part of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania Metropolitan Statistical Area. Other nearby unincorporated communities within Jenner Township include Jenner Crossroad, Ferrellton, Acosta, Gray and Ralphton. Also nearby but with separate municipal governments are the boroughs of Jennerstown, Pennsylvania and Boswell, Pennsylvania. Jenners is also part of the North Star School District. Jenners area code: 814; zip code: 15546.


Jenners was built in 1907 as a company town, by the Consolidation Coal Company, an interest of the Rockefeller Family of New York,[1] to house workers of its Mine No. 118. Jenners was named after its township, Jenner Township, Pennsylvania (where a brief history of the area is found on its wiki page).


Joseph Darby, who in April 2004 the Pentagon credited as the lone soldier who came forward to halt and expose the Abu Ghraib prisoner-of-war abuse scandal in Baghdad, Iraq, is a native of Jenners and a graduate of nearby North Star High School.[2] Darby received the 2005 Profile in Courage Award from the John F. Kennedy Foundation for his actions.[3] Darby's actions spark controversy locally; Darby's family felt that the community turned against him for being the whistleblower about Abu Ghraib.[2] In one interview, Darby said he believed only about 10% of the community supported him.[citation needed]



References




  1. ^ Cassady, John. 1932. An Outline of Somerset County. Scottsdale, Pa.: Mennonite Publishing House. p. 215.


  2. ^ ab "One Soldier's Unlikely Act
    Family Fears for Man Who Reported Iraqi Prisoner Abuse" Washington Post. May 6, 2004.



  3. ^ www.jfklibrary.org



External links




  • Jenners, Pennsylvania on Google Maps

  • Map of the Windber coal field showing Jenners' proximity to other local deep coal mines.

  • North Star School District.



Coordinates: 40°08′35″N 79°02′34″W / 40.14306°N 79.04278°W / 40.14306; -79.04278










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