King of Prussia Inn

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Location101 Bill Smith Blvd, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°05′04″N 75°22′58″W / 40.08444°N 75.38278°W / 40.08444; -75.38278
Built1719
ArchitectWilliam Rees (builder)
King of Prussia Inn
King of Prussia Inn in February 2017
King of Prussia Inn is located in Pennsylvania
King of Prussia Inn
King of Prussia Inn is located in the United States
King of Prussia Inn
Location101 Bill Smith Blvd, King of Prussia, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°05′04″N 75°22′58″W / 40.08444°N 75.38278°W / 40.08444; -75.38278
Built1719
ArchitectWilliam Rees (builder)
NRHP reference No.75001656
Added to NRHPDecember 23, 1975[1]

The King of Prussia Inn is a historic tavern in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania.[2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.[1][3]

King of Prussia Inn as it appeared circa 1919 prior to restoration and relocation

The original inn was constructed as a cottage in 1719 by the Welsh Quakers William and Janet Rees, founders of nearby Reesville. The cottage was converted to an inn in 1769 and was important in colonial times as it was approximately a day's travel by horse from Philadelphia. A number of settlers heading from there for Ohio would sleep at the inn for their first night on the road. In 1774 the Rees family hired James Barry (or Jimmy Berry) to run the inn, which henceforth became known as "Berry's Tavern". General George Washington first visited the tavern on Thanksgiving Day in 1777 while the Continental Army was encamped at Whitemarsh; a few weeks later Washington and the army bivouacked at nearby Valley Forge.[4]

A map created by William Parker, an American Loyalist, listed the inn as "Berry's" in 1777,[5] but a local petition in 1786 identified it as the "King of Prussia". It was possibly renamed to entice German soldiers fighting in the American Revolution to remain in this area. At some point a wooden signboard of the inn depicted King Frederick the Great of Prussia. The inn was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on December 23, 1975.[1][6]

Diary of Johann Conrad Döhla

The King of Prussia Inn is mentioned in a 1778 entry from the diary of Johann Conrad Döhla, a soldier from Ansbach-Bayreuth who fought on the British side during the war:

I must also comment that the King of Prussia has a house in Philadelphia and therefore is a citizen and enjoys the rights of citizenship. This house is built of wood and is supposed to have been put together and built in East Friesland, brought from there to England and on a ship to Philadelphia, where it was put up in one night. It is called in their language a "Tavern," in German an inn or pub ("Gast- oder Wirtshaus"), which bears a signboard showing the King of Prussia."[7]

Relocation

References

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