Coudersport is home to a
Scottish Rite Consistory. With approximately 3000 members, Coudersport's Consistory has the largest per-capita membership of any Scottish Rite Consistory. The newly re-opened
Ice Mine is a popular tourist attraction in Coudersport. The mine freezes with ice in the summer, and the ice melts in the winter. Coudersport was the home of "Untouchable"
Eliot Ness at the time of his death. He was a principal in the Guaranty Paper Corporation, which specialized in watermarking legal & official documents to prevent counterfeiting. The company moved from Cleveland to Coudersport around 1955 because operating costs were lower. Ness, with his wife and son, were living in the Brocklebank home from 1956 to 1957. Ness died there from a heart attack in May 1957. Located in the northern portion of Coudersport is the Coudersport Area Recreation Park (CARP). This sports and recreation park was established in the 1960s by a group of town leaders including Dr. William L. Mitchell, a local veterinarian. It currently has a football field with track & field capabilities, baseball and softball fields, basketball courts, picnic areas and hiking trails. According to historical books at the Penn State University Park library, Coudersport derived its name from a Dutchman named Couder who was a primary funder for the surveying of the future town as a "port" on the
Allegheny River, thus becoming Couder's Port. Coudersport was the former headquarters of
Adelphia, which at its peak was the 5th largest cable provider in the United States. The company went bankrupt due to internal corruption in 2002, and the headquarters were moved to Colorado a few years later. The fictional town of Farringdon, depicted in the
Judy Bolton detective series by
Margaret Sutton, is based on Coudersport, where Sutton grew up and attended school. The school, town hall, and several recognizable residences are described in her books. Judy Bolton Days, an annual festival honoring the books of the late Sutton, is hosted each October by the local Chamber of Commerce. Radio stations
WNG591 (a
NOAA Weather Radio outlet programmed out of
State College) and
WFRM (a locally programmed AM radio station, 600 kHz) are licensed to Coudersport. The former
WFRM-FM, 96.7 MHz, was licensed to Coudersport for much of its existence but was later reallocated to
Portville, New York. The local newspaper, the
Potter Leader-Enterprise, is published out of Coudersport. Coudersport is located near
Cherry Springs State Park, which features some of the darkest skies near the East Coast. This means the town is a prominent destination for stargazers. ==References==