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Isaac's is a chain of casual restaurants based in Pennsylvania known for its signature line of sandwiches, salads, and wraps named after birds. [1] [2]Headquartered in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, the restaurant chain has locations throughout the surrounding region, including Lancaster County, Chester County, Berks County, Dauphin County, York County, and Cumberland County.
It lies along Pennsylvania Route 29 between Hereford and East Greenville at latitude 40.4281539 longitude −75.5329608. [2] It is located in Upper Hanover Township and the ZIP Code is 18070. [3] Hosensack Creek flows from the northeast into the Perkiomen Creek (which flows through Palm) and forms the natural southern boundary of the village ...
Restaurants in Pennsylvania by populated place (2 C) B. Bakeries of Pennsylvania (9 P) D. Diners in Pennsylvania (4 P) F. French restaurants in Pennsylvania (2 P) T.
The Palm restaurant in Washington, D.C. The Palm opened its second location in Washington, D.C. in December 1972. [7] According to the company's web site, the prodding of former U.S. President George H. W. Bush, then U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, encouraged the families to open the second location. Bush often quipped that there was a ...
Winky's Hamburgers was a chain of hamburger fast food restaurants in and near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.It was founded by two brothers, Harold and Bernard Erenstein in 1962. [1] [2] Their slogans were "Fast Food Cheap" and "Winky's Makes You Happy To be Hungry."
In 2006, Congress passed Public Law 109-336, naming the building after Robert J. Thompson, a former Pennsylvania State Senator. [3] In 2013, the West Chester post office was one of the buildings being considered for sale by the United States Postal Service, though as of 2023 it is still a functioning post office. [4]
Pages in category "Post office buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
At that point, the Pennsylvania no longer had any restaurants, and guest-service directories instead listed restaurants near the hotel. [101] Hirschfeld rebranded the hotel as the Hotel Pennsylvania in 1995, [ 91 ] and he placed the hotel for sale in April 1996 for $150 million. [ 102 ]