Milestones, Inns and Taverns of the 1794 (Philadelphia and Lancaster) Pennsylvania Turnpike

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Picture Gallery
  • Background
  • Directions
  • Social levels of Establishments
  • Milestones 1-2-3-4
  • Milestone 5
  • Milestone 6
  • Milestone 7
  • Milestone 8
  • Milestone 9
  • Milestone 10
  • Milestone 11
  • Milestone 12
  • Milestone 13
  • Milestone 14
  • Milestone 15
  • Milestone 16
  • Milestone 17
  • Milestone 18
  • Milestone 19
  • Milestone 20
  • Milestone 21
  • Milestone 22
  • Milestone 23
  • Milestone 24
  • Milestone 25
  • Milestone 26
  • Milestone 26 West
  • Milestone 27
  • Milestone 28
  • Milestone 29
  • Milestone 30
  • Milestone 31
  • Milestone 32
  • Milestone 33
  • Milestone 34
  • Milestone 35
  • Milestone 36
  • Milestone 37
  • Milestone 38
  • Milestone 39
  • Milestone 40
  • Milestone 41
  • Milestone 42
  • Milestone 43
  • Milestone 44
  • Milestone 45 & 46
  • Milestone 47
  • Milestone 48
  • Milestone 49
  • Milestone 50
  • Milestone 51
  • Milestone 52
  • Milestone 53
  • Milestone 54
  • Milestone 55
  • Milestone 56
  • Milestone 57
  • Milestone 58
  • Milestone 59
  • Milestone 60
  • Milestone 61
  • Milestone 62
  • Lancaster City
  • Milestone 63
  • Milestone 64
  • Milestone 65
  • Milestone 66
  • Milestone 67
  • Milestone-68
  • Milestone 69
  • Milestone 70
  • Milestone 71
  • milestone-72
  • Milestone 73
  • Milestone 74
  • SwedesFord and Church Rd Stone


Milestone 20 - Missing 

This milestone was there in 1952, but now is missing.  The General Warren Inne located on the old Lancaster South of the Turnpike was close to this marker. The Inn was known as the Admiral Vernon when it first opened in  1744. He was a British Naval Hero. Later it became the Admiral Warren after a later British Naval Hero. In 1825 it became the General Warren after an American General who died at Bunker Hill. In 1831 the coming of the railroad signaled a slow decline in the inn that would last until the 1980's. Website to the General Warren contains a number of different views of it over the years. http://www.generalwarren.com/

 

*Above banner image was taken at Hopewell Furnace National Historic Site in Pennsylvania http://www.nps.gov/hofu/index.htm 

A Winter View of the General Warren Inne 

A Terrain map with the salmon colored stickpin showing the general location of missing Milestone 20 

Make a free website with Yola