Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The building was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976. Established as a tavern in 1704, it was previously named the William Penn Inn, Wayside Inn, Tunis Ordinary, and Streepers Tavern before being renamed in 1793 in honor of American Revolutionary War hero General "Mad" Anthony Wayne, who had once stayed there.
William Penn Inn Robert Evans Lower Gwynedd: Pennsylvania: 40.20247°N 75.25618°W One of the oldest restaurants in Pennsylvania. It was frequented by William Penn and his daughter Letitia. [7] 1716 309 Concord's Colonial Inn: unknown Concord: Massachusetts
Upper Gwynedd Township: 83: Kuster Mill: Kuster Mill: March 24, 1971 : On Skippack Creek at Mill Road and Water Street Road near Collegeville: Skippack Township: 84: Lady Washington Inn: Lady Washington Inn: November 26, 1982 : 2550 Huntington Pike
A shooter killed a faculty member in a science building at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on Monday, police said after a lockdown that paralyzed the campus community as ...
Thomas Wynne (July 20, 1627 – January 16, 1692) was personal physician of William Penn and one of the original settlers of Philadelphia in the Province of Pennsylvania.Born in Ysceifiog, Wales, where his family dated back seventeen generations to Owain Gwynedd, [1] he accompanied Penn on his original journey to America on the ship Welcome.
In about 1681, a group of Welsh Quakers met with William Penn to secure a land grant to conduct their affairs in their language. The parties agreed on a tract covering 40,000 acres (160 km 2 ), to be constituted as a separate county whose people and government could conduct their affairs in Welsh.
Gwynedd is an unincorporated community in Lower Gwynedd Township in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States. Gwynedd is located at the intersection of U.S. Route 202 and Sumneytown Pike. [ 2 ]
A story popularized in the 16th century claimed that the first European to see America was the Welsh prince Madoc in 1170. A son of Owain Gwynedd, prince of Gwynedd, he had supposedly fled his country during a succession crisis with a troop of colonists and sailed west.