Stengle's Restaurant showing entrance with three women and one man, who may be Thomas Stengle, at the northeast corner of North Main and East Gramby Street.s
Stengel's Restaurant and Bar, North Main and Gamby Streets, Manheim. Two sides of the building draped with flags for Old Home Week. Three women and six men are posed in front of the building, another man is off to the side.
Datestone on a building at 126 North Water Street, showing a bust and the words "Stiegel Elizabeth Furnace 1769". Also stamped on the back of the photo is R. Blickenderfer, Foundary and Machine Works, Lancaster, Pa.
Datestone on a building at 126 North Water Street, showing a bust and the words "Stiegel Elizabeth Furnace 1769". Also stamped on the back of the photo is R. Blickenderfer, Foundary and Machine Works, Lancaster, Pa.
Description
Datestone on a building at 126 North Water Street, showing a bust and the words "Stiegel Elizabeth Furnace 1769". Also stamped on the back of the photo is R. Blickenderfer, Foundary and Machine Works, Lancaster, Pa.
This early view card dates from the era when Manheim, PA boasted a fringed depot hack that met all trains. Passengers gather trackside as a Reading bound train steams into town. The shirt sleeved hack driver awaits to convey potential hotel guests to the "Summy House" or to Manheim's "Washington House."
The last Cornwall Railroad passenger run stands in front of the Reading's Manheim station on January 23, 1929. The Cornwall's old No. 2, originally named, "Castle Fin," pulled the final train from Manheim to Lebanon.
A by-stander confers with the engineer of Cornwall No. 2 just before the last train pulled out of Manheim over the "Joint Line," to Lebanon on January 23, 1929.