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At Fraunces
Tavern® Museum, you can enjoy
a hot meal or lift a cold pint where
the Founding fathers once did. Afterwards,
you'll want to head upstairs to the
Long Room, where George Washington
bade an emotional farewell to his
officers after driving the last of
the British from America. You can
read the intensely emotional eyewitness
account of these dramatic moments,
straight from the original, pen-and-ink
diary recorded by Benjamin Tallmadge.
Look around the fully restored room,
complete with 18th century furnishings
and artifacts, and it's easy to relive
the scene.
Fraunces Tavern® Museum is a treasure
chest of Revolutionary history that’s now owned by The Sons of the
Revolution, descendants of those who fought in the Revolutionary War.
Tour this charming three-story structure and you’ll discover
fascinating artifacts ranging from letters and diaries to muskets,
pistols and swords belonging to history’s most prominent revolutionary
figures, from Washington to Nathan Hale to Lafayette. Staffers may tell
you about their chilling, late night encounters with loud footsteps in
two of the tavern’s empty rooms. Also on exhibit through June 2006 is
Fighting For Freedom: Black Patriots and Black Loyalists.
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