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April 21, 1983 The Poth and Schmidt Development Houses is a set of six, historic, American double houses located in the Powelton Village neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . These houses were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
Philadelphia Episcopal Cathedral, located at 38th and Ludlow Streets in West Philadelphia, is the cathedral church of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania. Formerly known as the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Saviour , it was built in 1855, renovated in 1898, and rebuilt in the year 1906, after an April 16, 1902 fire.
Goss is a co-founder of Keepers of the Culture, a Philadelphia storytelling organization affiliated with the National Association of Black Storytellers, and a founding member of Patchwork, a storytelling group in Delaware. [6]
P. Frank Palumbo; Palumbo's; Teddy Pendergrass; Penn Community Bank Amphitheater; Pennsylvania Horticultural Society; Pennsylvania Opera Theater; Pew Center for Arts & Heritage
The Nathaniel Irish House is an historic, American home that is located in the Queen Village neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Part of Philadelphia's South Front Street Historic District , it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.
Frank C. Scherer Wagon Works is a historic factory located in the Fairmount neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1887, and consists of a three-story, six-bay, red brick and sandstone factory building with a two-story, three-bay office building. A one-story addition was built in 1928.
The Reverend Isaac Leeser, chosen by Congregation Mikveh Israel in 1829 as its hazzan, began to preach in English in 1831, inviting other Hebrew congregations to share his vision of Jewish ecumenism and beginning a period of institutional adaptation to the changing physical, educational, and economic circumstances of modern Jews in America and around the world that would lead directly to the ...
The event is the subject of much local media coverage throughout Philadelphia. [citation needed] In 2016, it was the starting location for the Women's March on Philadelphia. [15] In April 2017, Logan Circle hosted the 2017 NFL draft. [15]