Taverns: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Abbot's_Tavern_and_plaque.jpg|thumb|...Abbot's Tavern and historic plaque''.... click to enlarge|left]]
[[Image:Abbot's_Tavern_and_plaque.jpg|thumb|...Abbot's Tavern and historic plaque''.... click to enlarge|left]]
[[File:Locke Tavern.jpg|200px|thumb|left|James Locke Tavern from promotional materials for Andover's 300th Anniversary]]


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Revision as of 10:18, 1 April 2015

In A Townswoman's Andover, Bessie Goldsmith describes the Blunt Tavern, the Abbot Tavern, the Mansion House, the Locke Tavern, Traveler's Rest, the Elm House, and the Stowe House in detail, as well as giving a general overview of the tavern in the 1600 - 1800s.


Deacon Isaac Abbot's Tavern, built around 1680, is at the intersection of Whittier and Elm Streets (70 Elm Street). It became a tavern in 1776. On November 5, 1789, George Washington breakfasted there while making a tour of the eastern states shortly after his inauguration.

...Abbot's Tavern.... click to enlarge
...Deacon Isaac Abbot's Tavern.... click to enlarge
left
James Locke Tavern from promotional materials for Andover's 300th Anniversary


See

  • The Townswoman's Andover by Bessie Goldsmith (974.45 Gol), pages 50-70.
  • "George stopped here", Boston Sunday Globe, February 19, 1995.
  • "Homes tell stories of witches and wars", Eagle Tribune, August 14, 1998.


--Eleanor 12:50, November 17, 2009 (EST)
--Kim 09:29, December 22, 2011 (EST)

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