Portal:Philadelphia/Did you know? archive/2011
2011
[edit]- December
... that Kuerner Farm in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania inspired artist Andrew Wyeth to create over 1,000 paintings and drawings on subjects he found there?
… that there have been four professional sports teams in Philadelphia known as the Quakers (including the early present-day Philadelphia Phillies)?
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- November
… that in the 1745 election for the then-non-paying office of Mayor of Philadelphia, Alderman Abraham Taylor was elected but refused to serve, for which he was fined thirty pounds? Council then elected Joseph Turner, who also refused and was likewise fined.
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- October
... that the Main Exhibition Building of the Centennial Exposition of 1876, a temporary structure, was the largest building in the world by area, enclosing 21.5 acres (8.7 ha)?
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- September
... that the 17-ton Founder's Bell, which hangs within the tower of the One South Broad building, is sounded hourly (except on Sundays) and can be heard for a distance of 25 miles (40 km)?
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- August
… that there have been three major-league baseball teams in Philadelphia known as the Athletics?
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- July
… that John Coleman, in his 1883 rookie season for the Philadelphia Quakers (now the Phillies), pitched in 65 games, but tallied a record of only 12–48 (the team's record was 17–81)? His 48 losses, 772 hits given up, 510 runs allowed, and 291 earned runs allowed over that 98-game season remain single-season major-league records.
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- June
… that in 1803 Thomas Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis to Philadelphia to prepare for the Lewis and Clark Expedition under the tutelage of Dr. Benjamin Rush, who taught Lewis about frontier illnesses and the technique of bloodletting, and provided the Corps of Discovery with a medical kit that included fifty dozen of Dr. Rush's Bilious Pills, laxatives containing more than 50% mercury, which the corps called "thunderclappers"?
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- May
… that the Mischianza was an elaborate fête given in honor of British General Sir William Howe in Philadelphia on May 18, 1778, thrown by his corps of officers, who put up a sum of 3,312 guineas to pay for it? The events included a regatta along the Delaware River, accompanied by three musical bands and a 17-gun salute by British warships, a procession, a tournament of jousting knights, and a ball and banquet with fireworks display.
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- April
…that the Frankford Friends Meeting House, the oldest parts of which were built in 1775-1776, is the oldest surviving Quaker meeting house in Philadelphia?
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- March
Portal:Philadelphia/Did you know?/March 2011
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- February
…that Philadelphia's Christ Church, when its steeple was added in 1754, became the tallest building in North America, at 60 meters?
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- January
… that Eastern State Penitentiary, considered to be the world's first true penitentiary, was at its completion in 1829 the largest and most expensive public structure ever constructed in the United States?
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