tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4158406346037964376.post7407338021596786568..comments2024-03-20T00:32:01.785-07:00Comments on MemoriesandMiscellany: Early Philadelphia Inns and Taverns: Part 1Jack Sullivanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01499431800088809848noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4158406346037964376.post-23003910290158034112021-12-20T10:57:15.754-08:002021-12-20T10:57:15.754-08:00Thank you, Jack Sullivan, for providing this very ...Thank you, Jack Sullivan, for providing this very informative history of the Early Philadelphia Inns and Taverns. My mother grew up in Philadelphia and she has a collection of all six lithographs by James Moore Preston, framed. Now that she is downsizing, I'd like to know if anyone is interested in acquiring this collection? Or if there is a dealer of historic prints who might want to sell them? Thank you! HJS_NChttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02012636039467472315noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4158406346037964376.post-58999780301442430362021-11-12T19:23:09.356-08:002021-11-12T19:23:09.356-08:00Greetings,
Do you by any chance have, or know wher...Greetings,<br />Do you by any chance have, or know where I might search to find, a photo of Doerler's Saloon in Philadelphia on Broad Street ca. 1874-1894? The saloon is referenced numerous times in the newspapers of the era, and in an article entitled, "Old Time Drinking Places in Philadelphia<' that says, "On Broad street, midway between Walnut and Locust Streets, was Doerler's, a quit, German saloon whose chief claim to note was that it was the meeting place, for many years, of the Pegasus club, numbering among its members such local litterateurs as "Dan" Dawson, "Billy" Walsh, Charles Henry Luders, C.H. A. Esling, Melville Phillips, Morton McMichaels, 3d, and "Tom" White." Edward Doerler is an ancestor of mine.<br /><br />Thank you in advance for any help!DLWestwoodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01284077750339864968noreply@blogger.com