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Warren Z. Cole House

1725 establishments in PennsylvaniaGerman-American culture in PennsylvaniaHistoric house museums in PennsylvaniaHouses completed in 1725Houses in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in PennsylvaniaMontgomery County, Pennsylvania Registered Historic Place stubsMuseums in Montgomery County, PennsylvaniaNational Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, PennsylvaniaPennsylvania museum stubsSwiss-American culture in Pennsylvania
Warren Z. Cole House 01
Warren Z. Cole House 01

Warren Z. Cole House, now known as Indenhofen Farm and also known as the Kidder-De Haven House, is a historic home located in Evansburg State Park at Skippack, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, USA. It was built in 1725, and is a 2+1⁄2-story, brownstone dwelling, four bays wide and two bays deep. It features gable end chimneys and a steep shingled gable roof. The property also includes a summer kitchen and bake oven and a Swiss / German bank barn. The property was restored and is open to the public by the Skippack Historical Society.It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Warren Z. Cole House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Warren Z. Cole House
Evansburg Road, Skippack Township

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Wikipedia: Warren Z. Cole HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.221111111111 ° E -75.388888888889 °
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Address

Evansburg Road 1289
19426 Skippack Township
Pennsylvania, United States
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Warren Z. Cole House 01
Warren Z. Cole House 01
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Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
Montgomery County, Pennsylvania

Montgomery County is the third-most populous county in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the 73rd-most populous in the United States. As of the 2020 census, the population of the county was 856,553, representing a 7.1% increase from the 799,884 residents enumerated in the 2010 census. Montgomery County is located adjacent to and northwest of Philadelphia. The county seat and largest city is Norristown. Montgomery County is geographically diverse, ranging from farms and open land in the extreme north of the county to densely populated suburban neighborhoods in the southern and central portions of the county. Montgomery County is included in the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington PA-NJ-DE-MD metropolitan statistical area, sometimes expansively known as the Delaware Valley. The county marks part of the Delaware Valley's northern border with the Lehigh Valley region of Pennsylvania. In 2010, Montgomery County was the 66th-wealthiest county in the country by median household income. The county was created on September 10, 1784, out of land originally part of Philadelphia County. The first courthouse was housed in the Barley Sheaf Inn. It is believed to have been named either for Richard Montgomery, an American Revolutionary War general killed in 1775 while attempting to capture Quebec City, or for the Welsh county of Montgomeryshire (which was named after one of William the Conqueror's main counselors, Roger de Montgomerie), as it was part of the Welsh Tract, an area of Pennsylvania settled by Quakers from Wales. Early histories of the county indicate the origin of the county's name as uncertain.