Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
9. Jessop's Tavern. New Castle, Delaware Type of food: Colonial American What people say: It's housed in a nearly 350-year-old building, so it's only fitting that servers are outfitted in colonial ...
Lannie's Bar-B-Q Spot | Selma, Alabama. Details: 2115 Minter Ave.; 334-874-4478 Lannie's Bar-B-Q Spot restaurant review: Our local food writer recommends the famous pulled pork sandwich with red ...
Spurrier's Tavern was a well-known tavern and horse-changing depot which stood by the main road between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. (now U.S. Route 1) from 1771 to 1835 near what is now Jessup, Maryland. [1] George Washington visited the tavern several times during his presidency. After an 1835 fire, the building was repaired for residence ...
The Twenty-Sided Tavern is the venue where people gather to tell and retell stories set in a fantasy world. Though some story elements are set, much of the plot is revealed by audience choice, random dice rolls, or improvised parts. Because of these elements, no two stories told at The Twenty-Sided Tavern are ever the same.
Joseph Jessop's 98-year-old great-grandson, David Jessop Jr., officially restarted the 102-year-old clock on November 5, 2009. In 2012, Westfield, the owners of the Horton Plaza shopping center at the time, terminated the rental agreement with the Jessop family and gave the family 6 months to find a new site for the clock.
Jacob Arnold's Tavern, also known as the Old Arnold Tavern [1] and the Duncan House, [1] was a "famous" [2] historic tavern established by Samuel Arnold circa 1740. [3] Until 1886, it was located in Morristown Green in Morristown, New Jersey .
(The Center Square) – In 2024, the transition to electric vehicles, clean energy, and power grid demand and reliability continued to challenge Pennsylvania lawmakers. A partisan divide in the ...
When Daniel died in 1777, he left the tavern to his son, Daniel Jr., who eventually sold the tavern to his sister Susanna and brother-in-law, George Kemp, who renamed the tavern to the Kemp's Hotel. There are two special stones on the front face of the building bearing their names, George Kemp and Susana Kemp; both are dated 1795.