Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first Hudson's Grill restaurant and bar concept opened in the mid-1980s in Ventura, California. ... who responded to the News-Herald survey seeking the most-missed restaurants in the community ...
Henrietta Hudson, originally named Henrietta Hudson Bar & Girl, is a queer [1] restaurant and lounge in Manhattan's West Village neighborhood. [2] It operated as a lesbian bar from 1991 to 2014. Until it rebranded in 2021, [ 3 ] it was one of three remaining lesbian bars in New York City.
The new Revival Room restaurant and bar, which opened in Hudson last month in a 189-year-old building, is having some fun with history. ... Revival Room owner Gretchen Erb serves up a couple of ...
Lil' Deb's Oasis is a tropical restaurant, bar, and art installation in Hudson, New York, in the upper Hudson Valley.The restaurant has a unique menu, self-described as "tropical comfort food" and including elements of South Asian and Latin American cuisines while sourcing ingredients from the Hudson Valley.
The menu here showcases Rodriguez's creative evolution, centered on a custom 12-foot Mibrasa wood-fired grill. A roving raw bar cart adds theatrical flair, presenting illuminated displays of ...
The bar now known as Cubbyhole dates back to 1987 when it was owned and operated by Tanya Saunders and Debbie Fierro as a refuge for all comers under the name DT's Fat Cat. [4] [5] It has remained both a lesbian and queer friendly location throughout its history as bar patronage shifted throughout New York City's LGBTQ+ community.
The White Horse Tavern, located in New York City's borough of Manhattan at Hudson Street and 11th Street, is known for its 1950s and 1960s bohemian culture. It is one of the few major gathering-places for writers and artists from this period in Greenwich Village (specifically the West Village) that remains open.
The bar was once owned by a Patrick J. Clarke, an Irish immigrant who was hired in the early 1900s by a Mr. Duneen who ran the saloon. After about ten years working for him Clarke bought the bar and changed the name. The building is a holdout and is surrounded by 919 Third Avenue, a 47-story skyscraper.