Near 309 n. 3rd st: hotels, restaurants, cafes, campings, pubs
Nearest users: citzen czingerline tagzania stu_spivack
Nearest items
301 race st ( km)
Betsy Ross House ( km)
Betsy Ross is best known as the legendary maker of the first American flag
Ben Franklin sculpture: ( km)
Bronze sculpture, 9 feet tall, 2007, by James Peniston. The sculpture\'s surface contains the casts of more than 1,000 keys donated by local schoolchildren. The bronze contains the brass nameplates of several fallen firefighters from four centuries of P...
Philadelphia Mint ( km)
The primary mission of the United States Mint is to produce an adequate volume of circulating coinage for the nation to conduct its trade and commerce. In recent history circulating coin production has varied between 11 billion and 20 billion coins annual
Lightning Bolt ( km)
Isamu Noguchi designed this 60-ton stainless steel sculpture. It is 101-feet tall and marks the axis of Independence Mall and the Benjamin Franklin Bridge. It is situated at 5th Street and Vine, in a vest-pocket park. The sculpture depicts a bolt of light
National Constitution Center ( km)
independent, non-partisan, and non-profit organization dedicated to increasing public understanding of, and appreciation for, the Constitution, its history, and its contemporary relevance, through an interactive, interpretive facility within Independence
11 n 2nd st ( km)
103-107 Church st ( km)
312 market st ( km)
Franklin Square ( km)
Fox Philadelphia ( km)
Franklin Court ( km)
In the court itself once stood Benjamin Franklin\'s house. What is known of the house is that it was 3 stories high, covered 33 feet square, and included 10 rooms. The house was razed in 1812. Because no historical records of the look of the exterior exist
Federal Reserve Bank ( km)
The Federal Reserve System, which serves as the nation\'s central bank, comprises a Board of Governors, based in Washington, D.C., and a network of 12 Reserve Banks.
US Customs ( km)
Police HQ ( km)
Edgar Allen Poe's House ( km)
Poe lived in Philadelphia for six years from 1838-1844, and this period was his most prolific. Poe, his wife Virginia, and his mother-in-law Maria rented several homes in Philadelphia, but only the last house has survived.


