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Notable buildings include the Warden's House (c. 1757), Corpse House (Leichen Kappelchen) [2] (1786), Werner House, Tinsley Cottage, Sisters' House (1758), Moravian Church (1787), Brothers' House (1759), Lititz National Bank, Commonwealth National Bank (1922), Mary Dixon Memorial Chapel (1884) on the campus of Linden Hall School, and the ...
The Bulls Head public house. There is a public house here called The Bull's Head, which claims the distinction of being the highest public house in Leicestershire, at 787 feet (240 m) above sea level. [1] The hamlet also contains the Abbots Oak Country House, which is a Grade II listed building.
Bull's_Head,_Old_Glossop.jpg (640 × 480 pixels, file size: 93 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The space slated to become Bull's Bierhaus is where Valentino's Pizza & Pasta operated for 24 years. Jim Davis opened the Valentino's franchise in 1996 with 100 seats and 30 to 35 employees.
The Bull's Head. The Bull's Head is a Grade II listed public house at 15 Strand-on-the-Green, Chiswick, London, England. The building (Grade II listed in 1970) is 18th century with later additions; the architect is not known. It is a two-storey white-painted brick building, and still has its pantile roof with two dormer windows. The entrance ...
Image credits: raka_defocus #3. I was studying with a friend in their dorm in college. It was a suited dorm with a shared bathroom. Heard multiple girls going into the bathroom together franticly ...
An aerial view of 125 East Main Street, the first house in Lititz The Welcome Center at Lititz Train Station Aerial View of Lititz, PA Lititz Spring Park. Lititz / ˈ l ɪ t ɪ t s / is a borough in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States, 9 miles (14 km) north of Lancaster. [3] As of the 2020 census, it had a population of 9,370. [4]
The 1740s log farmhouse, with the summer kitchen, log garage, tool shed, and stone spring house. The Hess Homestead, in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, is a historic Mennonite farmstead near the town of Lititz. The property is an ancestral home of the Hess family, [1] who purchased the land from William Penn's sons in 1735.