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Three Pigeons : ウィキペディア英語版 | Three Pigeons
The Three Pigeons was a prominent and famous〔McNally, p. 120.〕 meeting place in Bergen Township, New Jersey during the revolutionary period, and was used historically as a landmark as well as a popular place for hosting special occasions. ==Location and Name==
The Three Pigeons stood at the bottom of the west side of the Hudson Palisades, east of a main road that was later to be the Hackensack Turnpike, and currently Bergen Turnpike. The two-story building〔 was located near the southern fringe of the settlement of Maisland near the intersection of what is now Tonnelle Avenue and Hackensack Plank Road,〔 within modern North Bergen, New Jersey.,〔Hagstrom, Hudson County.〕〔Eickmann, p. 21.〕 Today, the instersection is called "Six Corners", where a laundromat and cafe share the same name, in the residential and commercial neighborhood called New Durham. By the time the inn was erected, the name ''Three Pigeons'' had been used repeatedly in plays as the backdrop for scenes, for instance in ''She Stoops to Conquer'' (1773), Shakespeare's ''The Merry Wives of Windsor'' (1602) and Ben Jonson's ''The Alchemist'' (1610). Later literary scenes involving a "Three Pigeons" appear in ''Creatures of Impulse'' (1870) and Charles Dickens' ''Our Mutual Friend'' (1864–65),〔Caledonian, p. 441.〕 as well as in actual inns, such as the English Shakespearian actor John Lowin's "The Three Pigeons" at Brentford.〔Shakespeare, et al., p. 332.〕 It has been said that the name "Three Pigeons" in any of its variants may have more literary associations than any other tavern name.〔 Many other inns and taverns in England still use this name today.
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