hanoverton, ohio


links

minerva
curiosities

route 30
towns east
to pittsburg

our home

Visitors: 2776


take a stroll down
historic plymouth street

Historic Plymouth Street, with its many century homes and tall trees, is an architectural wonderland. Twenty-two buildings are still standing, a century and a half after they were built in early Hanoverton, a thriving port on the Sandy & Beaver Canal.
 
Historic Plymouth Street
 
 

Hanoverton's 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.
 

Historic Plymouth Street   Historic Plymouth Street
 

Early Hanover played a particularly key role in the life of the Sandy & Beaver Canal which extended 73 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.
 

Historic Plymouth Street   Historic Plymouth Street
 
Historic Plymouth Street   Historic Plymouth Street
 

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.
 

Historic Plymouth Street   Historic Plymouth Street
 
 

the spread eagle tavern & inn
Spread Eagle Tavern

The Spread Eagle Tavern is a Bed & Breakfast and Restaurant. The Federal style, three story, historic, brick inn has been artfully restored. Originally built in 1837, when Hanoverton was a growing center of commerce along the Sandy and Beaver Canal, it now offers fine dining in a charming historic setting with an atmosphere of warmth and hospitality. Below are photos of a side view of the restaurant and back entrance.

Side alley of the Spread Eagle Tavern   The Back of the Spread Eagle Tavern.
 

See more photos and learn more about
The Spread Eagle at the link below:
 

VISIT THE SPREAD EAGLE HERE

back to the top