The Allstadt House and Ordinary was built about 1790 on land owned by the Lee family near Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, including , Richard Bland Lee and Henry Lee III. The house at the crossroads was sold to the Jacob Allstadt family of Berks County, Pennsylvania in 1811. Allstadt operated an ordinary (a tavern) in the house, and a tollgate on the , while he resided farther down the road in a stone house. The house was enlarged by the Allstadts c. 1830. The house remained in the family until the death of John Thomas Allstadt in 1923, the last survivor of John Brown's Raid.
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| - Allstadt House and Ordinary (en)
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| - The Allstadt House and Ordinary was built about 1790 on land owned by the Lee family near Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, including , Richard Bland Lee and Henry Lee III. The house at the crossroads was sold to the Jacob Allstadt family of Berks County, Pennsylvania in 1811. Allstadt operated an ordinary (a tavern) in the house, and a tollgate on the , while he resided farther down the road in a stone house. The house was enlarged by the Allstadts c. 1830. The house remained in the family until the death of John Thomas Allstadt in 1923, the last survivor of John Brown's Raid. (en)
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| - Allstadt House and Ordinary (en)
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| - Allstadt House and Ordinary (en)
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| - Allstadt House and Ordinary, January 2009 (en)
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| - Junction of U.S. Route 340 and County Road 27, near Harper's Ferry, West Virginia (en)
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| - Allstadt Farm, West of U.S. Route 340 South of County Road 27, Harpers Ferry, Jefferson County, WV (en)
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| - 39.31625833333333 -77.75568333333334
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has abstract
| - The Allstadt House and Ordinary was built about 1790 on land owned by the Lee family near Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, including , Richard Bland Lee and Henry Lee III. The house at the crossroads was sold to the Jacob Allstadt family of Berks County, Pennsylvania in 1811. Allstadt operated an ordinary (a tavern) in the house, and a tollgate on the , while he resided farther down the road in a stone house. The house was enlarged by the Allstadts c. 1830. The house remained in the family until the death of John Thomas Allstadt in 1923, the last survivor of John Brown's Raid. The property was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. It was purchased by the American Battlefield Trust, which in 2019 donated it to the Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. (en)
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| - POINT(-77.755683898926 39.316257476807)
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