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Casselman (Hotel): Casselman (Hotel) is located on U.S. Route 40 at Grantsville.It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story, Greek Revival brick structure, built about 1842. It was built for Solomon Sterner to serve travelers on the National Road.
Three rooms of the Penn Alps Restaurant were originally a part of the log stagecoach stop known as the Little Crossings Inn. The village as it is today was founded by Alta Schrock in 1957. [3] The historic buildings in the village were taken from various locations across Western Maryland and were restored on site. [4]
I-68/US 40 westbound and US 219 southbound at the exit for MD 495 in Grantsville The main mode of transportation to Grantsville is by road. Interstate 68 , U.S. Route 40 and U.S. Route 219 all traverse Grantsville via the National Freeway, an east-west freeway traversing western Maryland and northern West Virginia.
East of Grantsville on U.S. Route 40 39°41′48″N 79°08′37″W / 39.696667°N 79.143611°W / 39.696667; -79.143611 ( Casselman's Bridge, National Grantsville
Casselman is at the intersection of MD 495 and Maple Grove Road along the Casselman River south of Grantsville Cove ( 39°40′49″N 79°18′00″W / 39.68028°N 79.30000°W / 39.68028; -79.30000 ( Cove, Maryland ) ) is at the intersection of Cove Road and Cove Run north of
The first section of MD 495 was constructed for 2.6 miles (4.2 km) between US 40 in Grantsville and Fire Clay Road in Casselman in 1933. [3] [4] The state highway was extended south 1.1 miles (1.8 km) to Jennings Road near Jennings in 1938. [5]
Casselman Bridge, a historic bridge east of Grantsville, Maryland. Casselman railway station, a station stop in the village of Casselman, Ontario, Canada; Casselman Wind Power Project, a wind farm in Somerset County, Pennsylvania; Ottawa/Casselman (Shea Field) Aerodrome, an aerodrome located east of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
The Casselman Bridge is a historic transportation structure on the Casselman River, located immediately east of Grantsville in Garrett County, Maryland, and preserved by the state of Maryland as Casselman River Bridge State Park. [2] [4] The bridge was built in 1813–1814 as part of the National Road. Historic markers posted at each end read: