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The Prospect of Whitby is a historic public house on the northern bank of the River Thames at Wapping, in the East End of London and the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It lays claim to being on the site of the oldest riverside tavern , dating from around 1520.
House was demolished in 1997. 30: Speed Farm: December 27, 1991 : W side NC 1436 between NC 1432 and NC 1434: Gupton: 31: Sterling Cotton Mill: Sterling Cotton Mill: May 16, 1996 : SE jct. of Seabord RR tracks and E. Green St.
North Carolina Highway 176 (NC 176) was established around 1928 and traversed from NC 181, in Pineola, north to NC 175, in Linville. In 1930 it was decommissioned in favor of an extension of NC 181. In 1930 it was decommissioned in favor of an extension of NC 181.
North end of US 321 and south end of NC 105 overlap; to ASU: 102.0: 164.2: US 421 north / NC 194 south (King Street) / NC 105 end: North end of US 421 / NC 105 and south end of NC 194 overlap: 102.6: 165.1: NC 194 north (Jefferson Road) – Todd: North end of NC 194 overlap: Deep Gap: 111.6: 179.6: US 421 south – Wilkesboro, Winston-Salem
Mulhern House was an historic home located at the end of Market Street. It was built about 1815 as a workers' residence that survived intact from the initial period of industrial development in Wappingers Falls. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1987. The building was destroyed in a gas explosion in February 1994. [7]
To the left of the inn are the Georgian houses of Pier Head which were built in 1811 for the employees of the London Dock Company. The railed gardens cover the former entrance to Wapping Basin. Opposite the pub is St. John's Church. Built in 1790, all that remains is the tower, as the main body of the church was destroyed during the Blitz. To ...
Children attended Little Brasstown School House in the 1920s and later went to the nearby Ogden school, which offered up to high school classes. The Ogden school closed in 1975. Today the only public schools for Clay County students are 10 miles (16 km) east in Hayesville. [6]
Historic Neuse River Bride at Falls, North Carolina. On Nov. 24th, 1846, the owner of certain property, Jas. D. Newsom, at the Falls (described as being 13 miles north of Raleigh on the Raleigh-Oxford Road) placed 113 acres for sale containing a grist mill, a saw mill, a tan yard, and store houses.