Pennsylvania Hotel & Motel Lodging Guide

Our Pennsylvania travel planning guide is where you can book a room, make hotel reservations and find information and tips to visit Pennsylvania. This Pennsylvania hotel and motel guide will help our readers find the perfect lodging accommodations for cities and places to stay in Pennsylvania. Whether you are traveling with your family on a leisure holiday vacation or visiting for a corporate business meeting, our Pennsylvania lodging guide will help you plan and find a hotel room that suits your specific needs. Free searchable list of available resorts, hotels, motels, inns, lodges, vacation rentals and other accommodations in Pennsylvania. This is where you can find available luxury five star Pennsylvania resorts, comfortable four star Pennsylvania hotels, clean three star Pennsylvania lodges, convenient two star Pennsylvania inns, and budget one star Pennsylvania motels.

Settled in 1681 by Quakers, Pennsylvania played a vital role in revolutionary America. The Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution were drawn up in Philadelphia--the nation's chief seat of government until 1800. Valley Forge was the site of the Continental Army's encampment during a critical winter of the American Revolution.

140 Cities With Hotels & Motels for Lodging in Pennsylvania

  • Allentown
  • Allentown West
  • Altoona
  • Barkeyville
  • Bartonsville
  • Beaver Falls
  • Bedford
  • Bensalem
  • Berwyn
  • Bethlehem
  • Blairsville
  • Bloomsburg
  • Bridgeville
  • Bristol
  • Brookville
  • Butler
  • Camp Hill
  • Canonsburg
  • Carlisle
  • Chambersburg
  • Chester
  • Clarion
  • Clarks Summit
  • Clearfield
  • Conshohocken
  • Coraopolis
  • Cranberry
  • Danville
  • Denver
  • Donegal
  • Douglassville
  • Dubois
  • Dunmore
  • East Norriton
  • Easton
  • East Stroudsburg
  • Ebensburg
  • Edinboro
  • Elizabethtown
  • Erie
  • Essington
  • Etters
  • Exton
  • Franklin
  • Frazer
  • Ft. Washington
  • Gettysburg
  • Gibsonia
  • Grantville
  • Greencastle
  • Greensburg
  • Grove City
  • Hanover
  • Harrisburg
  • Harrisville
  • Hazleton
  • Hermitage
  • Hershey
  • Horsham
  • Huntingdon
  • Indiana
  • Intercourse
  • Johnstown
  • King-of-Prussia
  • Kittanning
  • Lake Ariel
  • Lake Harmony
  • Lakeville
  • Lamar
  • Lancaster
  • Langhorne
  • Lebanon
  • Lester
  • Levittown
  • Lewisburg
  • Ligonier
  • Malvern
  • Manheim
  • Mars
  • Marshalls Creek
  • Matamoras
  • Meadville
  • Mechanicsburg
  • Mendenhall
  • Mercer
  • Middletown
  • Mifflinville
  • Milesburg
  • Millersville
  • Monroeville
  • Montgomeryville
  • Montoursville
  • Morgantown
  • Morrisville
  • Mountville
  • Mt. Pocono
  • New Castle
  • New Columbia
  • New Cumberland
  • New Holland
  • New Stanton
  • North Wales
  • Oakdale
  • Philadelphia
  • Pine Grove
  • Pittsburgh
  • Pittston
  • Plymouth Meeting
  • Pottstown
  • Pottsville
  • Punxsutawney
  • Quakertown
  • Reading
  • Ronks
  • Sayre
  • Scotrun
  • Scranton
  • Selinsgrove
  • Shawnee-on-Delaware
  • Shippensburg
  • Somerset
  • State College
  • Tannersville
  • Trevose
  • Uniontown
  • Warfordsburg
  • Warren
  • Washington
  • Wayne
  • Waynesburg
  • West Chester
  • West Homestead
  • West Middlesex
  • West Mifflin
  • White Haven
  • Wilkes-Barre
  • Williamsport
  • Willow Grove
  • Wormleysburg
  • York
  • Few states can equal Pennsylvania's wealth of natural resources, its diversity of landscape, or its contributions to United States history. Pennsylvania's traditions of civil and religious freedom have attracted people of many lands. Their labors have turned the state's resources into vast industries.

    Pennsylvania's waterways provide ample outlets for its commerce: eastern rivers link Philadelphia and other ports with the Atlantic Ocean; western rivers link Pittsburgh to the Gulf of Mexico; and Lake Erie provides access to the St. Lawrence Seaway. The state's mountains--the Poconos, the Appalachians, the Alleghenies--attract many tourists and sportsmen.

    The commonly accepted meaning of Pennsylvania is Penn's Woods. The first name suggested for the new colony, ''New Wales,'' was rejected. William Penn then proposed ''Sylvania,'' to which King Charles II of England added ''Penn'' in honor of Penn's father. During its early days as a nation, the United States was made up of 13 states spread along the Atlantic seaboard. Pennsylvania stood in the center of the new republic. Six states lay to the north and east, and six to the south. Because of its central location, Pennsylvania was given the nickname Keystone State.

    Pennsylvania lies in the Middle Atlantic region of the United States. Its eastern boundary is the Delaware River, which separates Pennsylvania from New York and New Jersey. To the southeast is Delaware. Maryland and West Virginia are the states to the south. To the west are West Virginia, south of the Ohio River, and Ohio, north of the Ohio River. In the northwest Pennsylvania borders on Lake Erie for 51 miles (82 kilometers). The remainder of the northern border is shared with New York. From east to west Pennsylvania's greatest length is 304 miles (489 kilometers). Its greatest width, from north to south, is 174 miles (280 kilometers). The state's total area is 45,333 square miles (117,412 square kilometers), including 367 square miles (951 square kilometers) of inland water surface and 735 square miles (1,904 square kilometers) of Lake Erie.


    Can't find it? Try a search with the power of Google

    Google
     
    Web gam-web.com

    Other States: [ AK | AL | AR | AZ | CA | CO | CT | DC | DE | FL | GA | HI | ID | IL | IN | IA | KS | KY | LA | ME | MD | MA | MI | MN | MS | MO ]
    [ MT | NE | NV | NH | NJ | NM | NY | NC | ND | OH | OK | OR | PA | PR | RI | SC | SD | TN | TX | UT | VT | VA | WA | WV | WI | WY | VI ]


    Book a room and make reservations for lodging accommodations in Pennsylvania