The Spread Eagle Inn and Tavern




My daughter and I are trying to do as many Xmasy things as we can before it's all over. Yesterday we took a day trip to a small town in Ohio to have lunch at The Spread Eagle Tavern and Inn.






What a fantastic day we had.  I can't imagine a better place to have a Xmas lunch.





We have always loved visiting early American taverns whenever we have a chance. Like the Dilworthton Inn in West Chester, Pa., The Farnsworth House and The Dobbin house in Gettysburg, The Wayside Inn in South Sudbury, Mass., The Spread Eagle Inn is the best of them all.





It's still surrounded by the old brick sidewalk.





You enter the tavern at the back of the building.




As you walk in the door there is wood storage that welcomes you with wonderful cedar smells.


 I am so impressed with this place.  For being built in 1837, it is in impeccable shape.


 Every prominent politician has visited here throughout it's history.  Mostly republicans but that was in the days before this present administration and republicans were not repugnant.

 One of the things I really enjoyed about seeing the tavern is visiting all of the unique little rooms.

 There are tables placed in tiny rooms throughout where you can have private little intimate meals.


 And there are small bars scattered through the place so you can have a beverage while you are waiting to be seated.

 This room was just charming.

 There were trees and decorations everywhere.


 Photos of politicians adorn the walls. You can spend the whole day here just checking out the memorabilia.



 Another bar.

 This is Pretty Boy Floyd's death mask.

 A taxidermy American Eagle.



 The decorations on this mantle, next to our table, were made with tiny apples.




There are a lot of stuffed animals in the rafters.


 And the food!  For very reasonable prices, you get very tasty hearty meals.  This is a German beef stew served in a pretzel bowl.  It was delicious.





Chicken Wellington was also delectable.





After leaving the tavern, we drove around the tiny town.

 There is a whole street of houses and churches built around the same time.


 The churches are so picturesque.

 The privte homes are all decorated too.

 A cute little park covered in snow.

The old school house and the original school bell. It was a perfect day.

For those of you that are interested, here is it's history:



Tavern & Inn History

Our story dates back to the canal boom era of the early 19th Century, an all but forgotten period in time when Hanover was a thriving port on the Sandy & Beaver Canal and an important link in the region's underground railroad.
Early Hanover played a particularly key role in the life of the Sandy & Beaver Canal which extended 73½ miles from the Ohio River at Smith's Ferry to the Ohio & Erie Canal at Bolivar. Situated midway between these two points just west of the big canal tunnel, Hanover was to become a flourishing center of commerce, boasting a peak population in the late 1830's of 2,000 inhabitants.

Having been settled in 1813 by the Quaker abolitionist James Craig, early Hanover was also known as a safe-haven for runaway slaves. Evident still today are remnants of the underground passage that connected George Sloan's "Brick Row" with his brother-in-law Dr. James Robertson's home just across the street. Runaway slaves were often whisked then, to a secret upstairs hideaway in the Robertson home that was accessible only by the way of a second-story window. At nightfall it is told, the slave fugitives would board a canal boat and flee to their next safe-haven and on to freedom in Canada.
It was in this setting that Will Rhodes commissioned the historic Spread Eagle Tavern to be built along Plymouth Street in the year 1837. Said to have been erected by canal artisans that were thrown out of work by the Bank Panic of 1837, the tavern is known still today as one of the area's finest examples of Federal Period architecture. The three floors, eleven rooms and twelve fireplaces inside indeed were taken directly from the works of the renowned late 18th Century architect Asher Benjamin, whose pattern books depict many of the fine raised-wood window and door casings, fluted column frames and intricately carved mantles that are seen throughout the tavern.
In 1863, the Sandy Valley Order of Free and Accepted Masons was organized on the third floor. And, finally, there's the folklore of Abraham Lincoln's stagecoach stop, chronicled in the minds of Hanover's early residents.
The wood-framed saltbox which adjoins the Spread Eagle predates the tavern. For many years it was home to Hanover's Justice of the Peace where, no doubt, countless marriages were performed and quarrelsome claims settled.
The coming of the Cleveland & Pittsburgh Railroad in the early 1850's signaled the end of the Sandy & Beaver Canal and ultimately the demise of the once bustling village of Hanover. Today virtually all that remains of this grand and illustrious past is historic Plymouth Street, with its many fine century homes and its once venerable Spread Eagle Tavern, with a cluster of ten national historic trust buildings adjacent to the Historic Spread Eagle Tavern.

Today, more than a century and a half after the tavern was built, and after a twenty-month ground-up restoration, the Spread Eagle is again open for business. Guests are welcome to dine in any one of our seven dining rooms...whether it be the more formal and private setting of the William McKinley room or the more rugged environs of the log "barn room".

Before or after dinner, cocktails and hors d'oeuvres are available in the Patrick Henry Tavern Room or below in Gaver's Rathskeller where 12-foot high vaulted brick ceilings and hand-chiseled stone walls will offer our patrons a taste of 19th Century-style revelry and good cheer. And for that road-weary traveler, overnight accommodations (on prearranged basis only) in one of our five guest rooms on the second and third floors will assure a tranquil and sound night's rest.

Comments

What a wonderful place! I'd love to eat there some day. Love the low ceilings, exposed beams and brickwork.
Mary said…
What a wonderful place, I would get lost with all those rooms. I would need a guide to find the ladies room and then back to my table. Nothing says Christmas like an old inn, love the mantel decorations.
1st Man said…
I love these pictures. It's like a history tour. Amazing that our country still has places like this, in so many places things get torn down and "updated" which is far from "updating" ha. Beautiful.
Leanna said…
This is wonderful. The pictures are awesome and the history lesson too. I love it when bloggers have a bit of history from the areas that they live. It's quite interesting to read. Thanks so much, dear. I love this.
What a fantastic place and interesting town history!
They really know how to fill up with food too :-)

Have a great day!

Christer.

TARYTERRE said…
what a fascinating place. just charming.