Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Dominion House Tavern, built before 1850, is the oldest remaining continuously run tavern in the Windsor-Detroit Border region and one of the oldest in Ontario. [1] [2] From its commencement it has served and housed many residents and travelers while the stagecoach ran from Windsor to Amherstburg. [3]
The Crooked House of Windsor. The Crooked House of Windsor (also known as the Market Cross House) is a commercial building in Windsor, England, dating from 1687. It is the oldest teahouse in England [1] and Grade II listed. [2] The building was reconstructed in the 17th (c1687) century [2] and now stands on "an outrageous slant."
One of many Carpenters Arms pubs located in the United Kingdom. This one is in Windsor, Berkshire. Carpenters Arms is a common British pub name. The Carpenters Arms are today an unrelated series of public houses informally referred to as "Pubs" within the United Kingdom. Historically the first such named "Carpenter Arms" was based on a forfeit ...
Richard Fitzgerald and his family lived in a house alongside the Macquarie Arms Hotel in George Street, Windsor. [1] The hotel was occupied in the late 1830s by army officers stationed at Windsor and it became known as the Mess House and referred to as such in Armstrong's map of the town (1842). [1]
Old Windsor is home to six pubs: the Bells of Ouzeley, the Fox and Castle, The Loch and The Tyne, the Jolly Gardeners, the Toby Carvery, and the Union Inn; [12] and one members club, The Old Windsor Club. [13] There are also a small number of local shops and several restaurants.
The Old Constitution House is a historic house at 16 North Main Street in Windsor, Vermont. It is the birthplace of the Vermont Republic and the Constitution of the State of Vermont . A mid-18th century building built in a simple Georgian architectural style , the Old Constitution House was originally called the Windsor Tavern , and belonged to ...
A 1904 postcard of the building. The Crooked House was a pub in South Staffordshire, England.Its name and distinctive appearance were the result of 19th-century mining subsidence which caused one side of the building to be approximately 4 feet (1.2 m) lower than the other.
The Deacon John Moore House is a historic house at 37 Elm Street in Windsor, Connecticut. The oldest portion of the house was built in 1664, making it one of the oldest houses in the state. It has been altered and renovated, but retains its original frame and other elements. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. [1]