The Round Top Museum was a Gettysburg Battlefield visitor attraction established by John H. Rosensteel in 1888 on the north foot of Little Round Top[1] near the Round Top Station and northeast of the Wheatfield Road and Grand Central Avenue (now Sedgwick Av) intersection. The museum of Battle of Gettysburg artifacts was in Rosensteel's 1884 frame home[2] and served as the "Round Top inn"[3] restaurant/small hotel.[4] On the east side of the residence, construction began in March 1902[2] for a "dancing pavilion" lit with acetelyne lamps that opened on May 25, 1902.[5] A 1906 hop was held at the "Little Round Top Hotel",[3] the "Round Top dance pavilion" was the site of a 1918 fire[4] and a 1925 stabbing,[6] and picnics at Rosensteel Park were held as late as 1957.[5] The facility also included a store where a Camp Renaissance CCC worker committed a theft in 1936.[6]
^"Improvements". Out of the Past: 100 Years Ago. May 7, 1985. Retrieved 2011-02-24. About 3 o'clock Wednesday afternoon the stable of Mr. George Englebert, on Seminary ridge, took fire…"
^"Local Miscellany". Out of the Past: Twenty-Five Years Ago. May 25, 1927. Retrieved 2011-02-18. The G. A. R. band gave a very enjoyable concert in the Diamond last Friday evening and "the next day it rained." … The dancing pavilion recently erected by John Rosensteel at Round Top was formally opened Friday evening. The floor was beautifully illuminated with acetylene lamps.