Neha Patil (Editor)

Golden Plough Tavern

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Built
  
1741

NRHP Reference #
  
71000737

Opened
  
1741

Phone
  
+1 717-848-1587

Added to NRHP
  
6 December 1971

Built by
  
Chambers, Joseph

Designated PHMC
  
June 23, 1967

Area
  
4,000 m²

Architectural style
  
Georgian architecture

Golden Plough Tavern

Location
  
157–159 W. Market St. York, Pennsylvania

Address
  
157 W Market St, York, PA 17401, USA

Similar
  
Barnett Bobb House, Colonial Complex, York County History C, Cookes House, Agricultural & Industrial Museum

The Gen. Horatio Gates House and Golden Plough Tavern are two connecting historic buildings located in downtown York, York County, Pennsylvania. The buildings were restored between July 1961 and June 1964, and operated as a museum by the York County History Center.

Contents

Gates house

The General Horatio Gates House was built by Joseph Chambers in 1751, and connected to the Golden Plough Tavern through a shared kitchen. It is a 2 1/2-story, brick and limestone dwelling in the Georgian-style. It was the home of General Horatio Gates (1727–1806), while the Second Continental Congress convened in York, September 30, 1777 to June 27, 1778.

Tavern

The Golden Plough Tavern was built by Martin Eichelberger in 1741 and is a two-story, Germanic influenced medieval style building. The tavern is quite significant for its age and social history but is also an exceptional museum of historic carpentry and vernacular architecture.

The ground floor wall construction is a rare type which blends timber framing with log building. These walls are framed and the spaces between the posts are infilled with hewn beams, each beam fitted into its own mortise, and the gaps between the beams chinked with stones and mud like a log cabin. This construction technique is similar to timber framing infilled with planks known by many names including post-and-plank.

The upper walls are half timbered in a Germanic style with brick nog and wattle and daub infill. Half timbered buildings in America are relatively rare, generally found in some areas settled by German immigrants.

The roof structure is framed with a Germanic type of truss called a liegender stuhl directly translated as a "lying chair" where chair has the general meaning of support. Liegender stuhl trusses in Europe are found in Switzerland and Germany.

The wood shingles on the roof are also a rare type for America.

The Barnett Bobb Log House was moved to this location in 1968.

It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.

References

Golden Plough Tavern Wikipedia


Similar Topics