Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania

If you live in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania and have been injured on the job, contact the Workers’ Compensation lawyers of Munley, Munley & Cartwright, P.C. Our law firm represents workers who have been injured in Stroudsburg, PA.

Our staff includes attorneys, paralegals and other professionals who are specially trained to assist in the evaluation, development, negotiation and trial of our cases.

At Munley, Munley & Cartwright, our goal is to provide exceptional legal services to our Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation clients. We strive to achieve the highest standard of excellence for the protection of individual rights through team work and the use of our considerable resources and experience.

Your Choice of Lawyer is Important. So CHOOSE CAREFULLYTM -- The Family of Workers’ Compensation LawyersTM at Munley, Munley & Cartwright -- to protect your rights.

Please contact us today in Stroudsburg, PA for more information.


On August 31, 1837, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, became the county seat of Monroe County. Stroudsburg, incorporated as a borough in 1815, was named for a settler, Colonel Jacob Stroud. Jacob Stroud built a stockade in 1776, called Fort Penn. In 1778, Fort Penn provided protection for survivors of the Wyoming Massacre. Stroud's home on 9th and Main Streets is now a museum operated by the Monroe County Historical Association The courthouse was also built in 1837. A public water system, with water from the Delaware Valley, was completed in Stroudsburg in 1868.

Stroudsburg's population is approximately 5,312.  Its 4.6 sq. kilometers is in Monroe County, near the New Jersey border in northeastern Pennsylvania. Most of Monroe County was settled in the 18th century.  The oldest settlement is the borough of East Stroudsburg.

Transportation is the key to development and marketing.  From stagecoach, wagon, and boat transportation to the railroad in 1856, opportunities have been available for Stroudsburg.  Its people have responded.

Tourism thrives in this area of much natural beauty. The Pocono Mountains and proximity to the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, Big Pocono State Park, Gouldsboro State Park and Tobyhanna State Park, Pocono International Raceway, and Tobyhanna Army Depot, with clean streams, and fresh air, are a magnet to surrounding industrialized and manufacturing areas.

 

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