Jamison City is a census-designated place in Sugarloaf Township, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, United States.
Jamison City is located at 41°18′5″N 76°21′59″W / 41.30139°N 76.36639°W / 41.30139; -76.36639 (41.301523, -76.366443),[5] in the northern reaches of Columbia County.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 0.4 square miles (1.0 km2), all land.
[6] The CDP is situated on mostly level terrain, and surrounded on the north, east, and west by mountains.
[7] Jamison City was formed at the northern terminus of the Bloomsburg and Sullivan Railroad.
However, it stopped producing wood in 1912, and the final load of lumber from it was shipped to Bloomsburg in 1914.
Jamison City station on the Bloomsburg and Sullivan Railroad. Building is one of the few remaining stations that is in the original location and is still standing. The station is still standing as of 2023. A monument in the front yard commemorating the 100th year Centennial of Jamison City Area in 1989 (dedicated to E. William (Bill) and Pauline Mather who owned the station grounds until 2012) and the Mather General Store building to the right of the train station that his father ran when Jamison City was in its heyday circa 1889.
Historical Marker on the door of the Jamison City station on the Bloomsburg and Sullivan railroad. Historical marker was placed for the Jamison City Centennial celebration that occurred in July 1989.
Jamison City Bloomsburg and Sullivan railroad station Centennial marker on the grounds of the Jamison City train station on the Bloomsburg and Sullivan railroad commemorating the Jamison City Area Centennial celebration that occurred in July 1989. Marker was dedicated to Bill and Pauline Mather who owned the land of the train station until 2012.
Station on the defunct Bloomsburg and Sullivan Railroad at its northern terminus in Jamison City
B. Frank Mather General Merchandise, a store that operated in Jamison City from 1903 to 1926.