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Growth continued for Plymouth Meeting during the 1900s which led to the advent of the Pennsylvania Turnpike, the Plymouth Meeting Mall, high-rise and garden apartment complexes, industries and office buildings. What is now Germantown Pike was ordered laid out by the Provincial Government in 1687 as a "cart road" from Philadelphia to Plymouth ...
Plymouth Meeting Country Store and Post Office 3-5 E. Germantown Pike c.1826-1827 Built by Samuel Maulsby. His son Jonathan served as Plymouth Meeting's first postmaster. [6] 1871 – Jesse Hall Store/Plymouth Meeting P. O. [5] Hall's Store circa 1900: Jones-Williams House [7] 4 E. Germantown Pike c.1787 1871 – J. R. Ellis [5] 6 E. Germantown ...
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.
Plymouth Township is a township with home rule status in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. The township has been governed by a home rule charter since 1976 and is no longer subject to the Pennsylvania Township Code. [3] The population was 16,525 at the 2010 census. It is serviced by the Colonial School District and is home to the Plymouth ...
PA 340 east (Old Philadelphia Pike) South end of PA 340 overlap: 4.492: 7.229: PA 340 west (Old Philadelphia Pike) North end of PA 340 overlap: East Earl Township: 10.545: 16.971: US 322 east – Honey Brook: South end of US 322 overlap: 10.621: 17.093: US 322 west – Blue Ball, Ephrata: North end of US 322 overlap: 11.224: 18.063: PA 23 east ...
[15] [16] By 1970, what was the US 309/PA 29/US 222 freeway had the PA 29 designation removed, US 309 downgraded to PA 309 and US 222 was truncated to end at its current northern terminus. [17] By the 1980s, I-78 became part of the freeway that occupied PA 309. [18] In 1984, PennDOT was planning to extend PA 145 and US 222. Traffic engineer ...
At 3-5 Germantown Pike, just east of his house, Maulsby built the Plymouth Meeting General Store and Post Office (c.1826–27). His son Jonathan (1801–1845) ran the store and served as Plymouth Meeting's first postmaster. [18]
The Plymouth Meeting Mall was designed by Victor Gruen and built by The Rouse Company in 1966, it was the third fully enclosed shopping mall in the Philadelphia area. The original two anchor stores were Strawbridge & Clothier and Lit Brothers. The One Plymouth Meeting office tower was added on an outparcel in 1969. [1]