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Benjamin Patterson Inn

1796 establishments in New York (state)Buildings and structures in Steuben County, New YorkCorning, New YorkDrinking establishments on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)Federal architecture in New York (state)
Finger Lakes, New York Registered Historic Place stubsHistoric house museums in New York (state)Hotel buildings completed in 1796Museums in Steuben County, New YorkNational Register of Historic Places in Steuben County, New YorkTaverns in New York (state)Taverns on the National Register of Historic Places in New York (state)
Jennings Tavern Oct 09
Jennings Tavern Oct 09

Benjamin Patterson Inn, also known as Jenning's Tavern, is a historic inn and tavern located in Corning in Steuben County, New York. It is a two-story, ell shaped frame structure in the Federal style. Built in 1796, it is the oldest frame building in the area and perhaps all of Steuben County.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.The Benjamin Patterson Inn is a historic house operated as part of the Heritage Village of the Southern Finger Lakes by the Corning Painted Post Historical Society. Visitors can tour the historic tavern room, dining room, kitchen, guest quarters and innkeeper's quarters, and view the Society's collection of textile equipment in the Long Room. The Inn grounds also include an 1855 log cabin, an 1878 schoolhouse, a barn with agriculture tools and equipment and a working late 19th-century blacksmith shop.The Society also operates the Painted Post-Erwin Museum, a museum of local history located in a late 19th-century railroad depot in Painted Post, New York.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Benjamin Patterson Inn (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Benjamin Patterson Inn
West Pulteney Street, Town of Corning

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Wikipedia: Benjamin Patterson InnContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.151388888889 ° E -77.064166666667 °
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Address

West Pulteney Street 75
14830 Town of Corning
New York, United States
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Jennings Tavern Oct 09
Jennings Tavern Oct 09
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Corning station
Corning station

Corning was a major station along the Erie Railroad, located on the Susquehanna Division of the main line. Located originally in downtown Corning, New York, the station first opened on the line in January 1850, with the completion of the New York and Erie Railroad from Piermont in Rockland County to Dunkirk in Chautauqua County. The first depot at Corning was built in 1861 and located at the intersection of Erie Avenue and Pine Street in Corning. (Erie Avenue is now Denison Parkway (NY 352).) The station lasted at this location until 1952, when construction of a new track bypass of Corning began. The newer depot opened on November 21, 1952. This new station was located at the junction of West Sycamore Street and North Bridge Street on the north side of Corning. The station served in the 1960s as a junction on the Atlantic Express/Pacific Express, the Erie Limited, the Lake Cities to Chicago and the Phoebe Snow and the Owl to Buffalo. Until at least 1961, the station for Chicago trains was separate from the earlier Lackawanna station for Buffalo trains. However, in a consolidation and a rerouting, the Erie station took on the Buffalo-bound trains by 1963. Corning was also the terminus of the Erie Railroad's Rochester Division service to Avon in Livingston County. Passenger service along the Rochester Division ended on September 30, 1947 when train no. 468 arrived at Corning station. The last passenger train to use the Corning station was the eastbound Lake Cities, which made its final departure on January 6, 1970.