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Cookes House, also known as Tom Paine's House, is a historic home located at York, Pennsylvania, York County, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1761, and is a two-story, Germanic and Provincial Georgian influenced stone dwelling. About 1800, it was converted to a double house.
It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, brick and limestone dwelling in the Georgian-style. It was the home of General Horatio Gates (1727–1806), while the Second Continental Congress convened in York, September 30, 1777, to June 27, 1778, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.
Roughly bounded by Edgewood Avenue, the Windsor Township line, a Maryland and Pennsylvania line, Chestnut Road, Country Club Road, and the York Township line 39°53′55″N 76°36′35″W / 39.898611°N 76.609722°W / 39.898611; -76.609722 ( Red Lion Borough Historic
This district encompasses 309 contributing buildings and includes notable examples of the Late Victorian and Classical Revival styles. Notable buildings include the Christ Lutheran Church (1812–1814), Odd Fellows Hall (1850), U.S. Post Office (1911), Strand and Capitol Theatre (1923–1925), Elks Home (1860s), Pullman Factory Building (c. 1900), Sylvia Newcombe Center (1892), Friends Meeting ...
Oldest English-built house in Pennsylvania; only extant building known to have been visited by William Penn: Hop Angel Brauhaus: Philadelphia, Fox Chase: 1683 Restaurant German-American fare; built in 1683 and a restaurant since the mid-20th century; [1] formerly, the Old Brauhaus, the Blue Ox Brauhaus, and the Blue Ox Bistro [2] Pont Reading ...
York Steak House was a national chain of steakhouse restaurants in the United States. It was among several chains owned at the time by cereal manufacturer General Mills. By 1982, there were nearly 200 restaurants in 27 states from Texas to Maine. [1] Though popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the majority of its locations shut down in ...
Built in 1796, it is a two-story, six-bay, Georgian-style stone building with brick chimneys. The main block measures fifty feet by thirty-seven feet, with a rear kitchen wing measuring twenty-nine feet by twenty feet. It remained in operation as an inn until 1854. During the twentieth century, a restaurant opened in the building. [2]
Marshallton, Chester County, Pennsylvania; McAllister-Beaver House; John McCullough House; Mechanicsburg Commercial Historic District (Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania) Daniel Meredith House; Michael and Magdealena Bixler Farmstead; Miles-Humes House; Mill Creek Historic District (Bryn Mawr and Gladwyne, Pennsylvania) Mill Tract Farm; Miller's House ...