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Germantown Pike (also known as Germantown Avenue for a portion of its length) is a historic road in Pennsylvania that opened in 1687, [1] running from Philadelphia northwest to Collegeville. The road is particularly notable for the "imposing mansions" that existed in the Germantown neighborhood in Philadelphia.
4 E. Germantown Pike c.1787 1871 – J. R. Ellis [5] 6 E. Germantown Pike Jonathon Jones House [8] 8 E. Germantown Pike 1854 1871 – R. Jones [5] George Hitner Residence [9] 12 E. Germantown Pike 1871 – Mark Jones [5] George Hitner was issued a license to operate an inn in 1778. [10] Hitner Barn "The Barn at 14 East" 14 E. Germantown Pike c.1714
On Germantown Pike, bounded by Cross Key Road, Grange Avenue, Mill Road, and Ridge Pike 40°10′51″N 75°25′20″W / 40.180833°N 75.422222°W / 40.180833; -75.422222 ( Evansburg Historic
Bethlehem Pike is a historic 42.21 mi (67.93 km) long road in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania that connects Philadelphia and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. It began as a Native American path called the Minsi Trail which developed into a colonial highway called the King's Road in the 1760s.
Stephen Rush House, located at 3851 Germantown Pike, is a two-story fieldstone structure that served as a center of food and drink to travelers along Germantown Pike. This Inn was built about 1803 on land purchased from St. James Church. Evansburg Inn, located at 3833 Germantown Pike, is a large, two-story plastered fieldstone inn with end ...
The bridge was built in 1792 and repaired in 1874. It has eight spans, is 33-foot (10 m) wide, with an overall length of 202-foot (62 m). The bridge carries Germantown Pike across Skippack Creek. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970. [1]
Roughly bounded by Union Rd., Dayton Germantown Pike, and Bear Creek 39°40′48″N 84°18′34″W / 39.68°N 84.309444°W / 39.68; -84.309444 ( Salem Bear Creek Church, Salem Evangelical Lutheran
Plymouth Friends Meetinghouse is a historic Quaker meeting house located at the corner of Germantown Pike and Butler Pike in Plymouth Meeting, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. It is part of the Plymouth Meeting Historic District , and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.