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The Sun Inn ceased operations as a hotel in 1961, two hundred years after receiving its original license. To save the inn from deterioration and demolition, the Sun Inn Preservation Association was created in 1971 to raise funds and acquire the property. The inn was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. [4]
Location of Chester County in Pennsylvania Map of Chester County (clickable). This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in eastern Chester County, Pennsylvania.
King of Prussia Inn located in the median of US 202 in 1960 The original location of the King of Prussia Inn sat roughly where the left turn lanes of US 202 to North Gulph Road sits today right next to the KOP sign. The inn was forced to move with the expansion of U.S. Route 202. U.S. 202 is a major north–south highway that passes through the ...
Plans unveiled Tuesday show Baltimore County could have nearly 290 new housing units on the 18-acre site of the former Hunt Valley Inn. After the Baltimore County Council overturned County ...
The benefits of Medicare Advantage: How it's different Medicare Advantage — or Part C — is an alternative to Medicare parts A and B. These plans are offered by private insurers that contract ...
Notable buildings include the Upper Mill or Spring Valley Mill (c. 1740), the Lower Mill (c. 1820), a blacksmith and wheelwright shop, a cooperage, a store, and two inns—the "Neff's Tavern" and Temperance Inn (c. 1838). The contributing structures are the Spring Valley Mill Dam and a stone arch bridge. [2]
Swiftwater Inn was a historic inn and tavern located in Pocono Township, Monroe County, Pennsylvania. It was originally built in 1778, and was a three-story building with a gambrel roof. It had a two-story front verandah. The building had various additions built in the mid- to late-19th century. [2]
The Riverside Inn was a hotel and dinner theater in Cambridge Springs, Crawford County in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. Built in the late-1880s at the height of the mineral springs craze in the United States, it was operated as a resort for vacationers heading to the nearby springs that gave Cambridge Springs its name.