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1794 estate, modified several ... Warwick Township: 9: Bristol Historic District: Bristol Historic District. ... Moland House. May 19, 1989 1641 Old York Road ...
Moland house interior with replication of Washington's Plan for the Battle of Brandywine signed by his Generals. In the early evening of August 10, 1777, 11,000 Continental Army and militia soldiers were marching up York Road towards the Cross Roads with Bristol Road (which is known today as Hartsville, PA) on their way to Coryell's Ferry (now New Hope), intending to camp four miles beyond the ...
The Moland House was General George Washington's headquarters when 11,000 Continental Army troops camped in Warwick Township from August 10 to August 23, 1777, while on their way to the Battle of Brandywine. The encampment stretched along both sides of Old York Road, on the slope of Carr's Hill to the north, on both sides of Bristol Road, from ...
Moland House an old stone farmhouse built around 1750 located in Warwick Township, served as the headquarters for General George Washington during the American Revolutionary War from August 10, 1777, until August 23, 1777.
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The Thomas Ellison House was built by William Bull of Orange County, NY, in 1754. A copy of the contract is in possession of the William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association. The house was one of five known houses built by Bull, an immigrant from Ireland. [140] Morgan's Tavern Gideon Morgan, proprietor [141] Litchfield, Connecticut
South of Knauertown off Pennsylvania Route 23 on Warwick Furnace Road 40°09′03″N 75°44′28″W / 40.150833°N 75.741111°W / 40.150833; -75.741111 ( Warwick Furnace East Nantmeal Township
The Thomas Bull House was built sometime between 1783 and 1796; Bull was a stonemason and the manager of Samuel Van Leer's Reading Furnace; he served as a lieutenant colonel in the Revolutionary War. Reading Furnace straddles French Creek , which forms part of the boundary between East Nantmeal and Warwick townships.