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Volume 41
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Tredyffrin Easttown Historical Society History Quarterly Digital Archives
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Source: Winter 2004 Volume 41 Number 1, Page 40
Then... & Now Blue Ball Inn
Page 40
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TOP: John Pusey Croasdale, a gentleman named Henderson, and a third unidentified
man with an 1899 Locomobile Steamer in front of the Blue Ball Inn at Daylesford
Road in the fall of 1900. This steam powered Locomobile is the first vehicle
manufactured by The Locomobile Company of America, of Bridgeport, Conn. They
made cars beginning in 1899 with this model and ended with luxurious, elegant
touring cars in 1929, when they went out of business. The name is a combination
of “locomotive” and “automobile.” This runabout, costing $600, was very
expensive for its time, required lubrication and water every 20 miles and proved
to be unreliable. John Croasdale was an 1896 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania
Law School and married Mary Gurney Okie, daughter of Dr. Richardson B. Oakie,
in this Inn. They lived here for many years."
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BOTTOM: The former Inn, now a private
residence, sits where Old Lancaster Road meets Russell Road just northwest of
the Daylesford railroad station. It was originally built around 1795 and was
a low-class drovers tavern catering to itinerant merchants and peddlers. One
of the early owners, Mrs. Prissy Robinson, was notorious for her caustic temper
and the many murders that occurred at the tavern during her ownership. Later
residents claim they still hear her ghost.
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