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Pinchgut vs. The Gut

Could you locate Dogtown, Pinchgut or Hollywood on a York County map?

Well, after working my way through the “Gazetteer of York and Adams Counties, Pennsylvania," I can get close.

The South Central Pennsylvania Geneaological Society has produced the 90-page geographical dictionary, listing thousands of county places, prominent and obscure.

Dogtown, for example, covers Adams Street in West York between Princess Street and the Codorus, also known as Highlandtown and Smoketown.

Pinchgut is a nickname for Adamsville, near Red Lion. But to confuse things more, Adamsville is also known as Arbor.

But Pinchgut daren’t be confused with The Gut, a “freak of nature at the mouth of the Conewago Creek," the gazetteer states.

Centuries ago, the creek cut a deep, two-mile channel - The Gut - causing the southern branch to flow into the Susquehanna at Saginaw, three miles downstream from the main branch at York Haven. Today, Gut Road runs along this Conewago delta.

Then, there’s Hexa Goss or Witches Alley, an old name for South Duke Street in York.

The county has a settlement called Hollywood near — but not the same as — Benroy on Camp Betty Washington Road. Hollywood actually is near the former site of Camp Betty, a retreat for girls connected with St. John’s Episcopal Church.

We plan to buy several copies of the $15 gazetteer, compiled by York County Heritage Trust archivist Lila Fourhman-Shaull (lshaull@yorkheritage.org), as a desk reference in our newsroom.

Then, when we hear a call on the police scanner for a house fire near Mud-Town (Pennville in Penn Township) or a drowning at Neal’s Hole (a tributary of Muddy Creek in Peach Bottom Township), we’ll have another way to locate these sites.

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