…forebears could and did construct, it seems that there are more than enough historical connections to warrant continued preservation of Hybla. (Hybla was almost certainly named for a mountain and…
…forebears could and did construct, it seems that there are more than enough historical connections to warrant continued preservation of Hybla. (Hybla was almost certainly named for a mountain and…
…wayside. Nineteenth century view of Hybla Click this link for my recent York Sunday News column on Hybla and the Mifflins and Wrights. Another former post indicates that Jonathan Mifflin…
…might be demolished. Here is a link to Scott Mingus’s recent posts on the significant role Hybla and the Mifflins played in the Underground Railroad. Nineteenth century view of Hybla…
…York blog posts and column on Jonathan Mifflin and Hybla. And here are Scott Mingus’s Cannonball blog posts on the importance of the Mifflins and Hybla in the Underground Railroad….
…property Hybla after an ancient Sicilian mountain known for its flowers and bees, and the Hubers continued the descriptive name for the hilltop retreat. A fairly recent view from the…
…Wright Ewing and Susannah Wright Huston were cousins of Mrs. Jonathan Mifflin. Samuel W. Mifflin took possession of Hybla in 1840 to 1846. He was a civil engineer. He is…
…a link to Scott Mingus’s many blog posts on the Civil War and Underground Railroad significance of the Mifflin House. Nineteenth century view of “Hybla,” the Mifflin House …