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Front Street (Philadelphia)

Streets in Philadelphia
NW Corner South St and Front Philly
NW Corner South St and Front Philly

Front Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is a north–south street running parallel to and near the Delaware River. In 1682, when the city was laid out by William Penn, it was the first street surveyed and built in the new colony of Pennsylvania. As part of the King's Highway, which extended from Boston to Charleston, South Carolina, and as the waterfront of Philadelphia's port, it was the most important street in the city from its founding into the nineteenth century.Front Street is the origin street of Philadelphia's numbered streets. There is no First Street, Front Street exists in its place, and numbered streets begin at the next major block with Second Street, about one-tenth mile west. At least three stations of SEPTA's Market–Frankford Line are built above Front Street. They include Girard Station, Berks Station, and York–Dauphin Station. SEPTA gives the address of also Spring Garden Station as Front Street, by which pedestrians have access, but its platform lies in the median of Interstate 95 over Spring Garden Street, just west of Front Street.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Front Street (Philadelphia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Front Street (Philadelphia)
East Oregon Avenue, Philadelphia South Philadelphia

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.914 ° E -75.149 °
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Address

The Original Tony Luke's

East Oregon Avenue 39
19148 Philadelphia, South Philadelphia
Pennsylvania, United States
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Phone number

call+12155515725

Website
theoriginaltonylukes.com

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NW Corner South St and Front Philly
NW Corner South St and Front Philly
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Nearby Places

Stiffel Senior Center
Stiffel Senior Center

The Jacob and Ester Stiffel Senior Center of the Jewish Community Centers of Philadelphia (the 'Stiffel Center') opened in 1928 as Jewish Education Center No. 2 (Hebrew: תלמוד תורה) at the southeast corner of Marshall and Porter Streets in South Philadelphia. The Center was funded by Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia. The neighborhood's Jewish population aged, and the Federation closed the building in 2011 and sold it in 2013. The original Jewish Education Center offered free religious and Hebrew instruction as well as recreational activities. South Philadelphia's Jewish population aged in the late 1960s and the Center evolved its programming for its aging population.The Stiffel Senior Center offered education and social programs, served kosher hot meals, and provided other resources for its aging members. The Stiffel Center was supporting 225 elderly Jewish neighbors in 1989. Before its closing, the Center was serving approximately 500 neighborhood community members of whom 150 were Jewish.In May 2011, the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia voted to close the Stiffel Center due to the Center's increasing costs in maintaining the aging building. Federation reported losing $200,000 a year on the building and another $400,000 was needed to fix repair structural issues. The Federation sold the building in 2013 for $325,000 to Temple Housing Association in Jackson, New Jersey. In October 2012, the Stiffel Center organization merged with the Klein JCC to create a single agency.On June 14, 2013, the Philadelphia Historical Commission added the building to the Philadelphia Register of Historic Places, protecting it from inappropriate alterations and unnecessary demolition.