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The restaurant replaced Memphis Taproom, which occupied the space for 15 years. [4] Meetinghouse was opened by Colin McFadden and Keith Shore. [ 5 ] The restaurant serves beer under its own label, brewed by Tonewood Brewing.
Meeting Street Inn entrance. In December 1837, the Charleston Theatre occupied the two-story building at 174 Meeting Street in downtown Charleston, South Carolina. [1] The building was designed to resemble Karl Friedrich Schinkel's Royal Theatre of Berlin, Germany. The building was destroyed in the widespread Charleston fire of 1861.
After many years in Pawtucket, Stone Soup returns to Providence September 2019. Shows will be at the Music Mansion on 88 Meeting Street. Founded in 1980, [1] it has presented concerts by artists such as Catie Curtis, Pete Seeger, Patty Larkin, Ellis Paul, The Low Anthem, Northern Lights, Holly Near, and Marshall Crenshaw. And continues to ...
[1] In 1799, the corner parcel was bought by Henry William de Saussure and Timothy Ford. The two lawyers temporarily rejoined the house with the neighboring parcel at 63 Tradd Street before ultimately splitting off 58 Meeting Street in 1801 into its current dimensions. De Saussure received 58 Meeting St. as part of the division.
Hibernian Hall is located at 105 Meeting Street, just north of the intersection of Meeting and Broad Street in central Charleston, an intersection known as the "Four Corners of Law". The hall was constructed in 1840 to a design by Thomas U. Walter of Philadelphia for the Hibernian Society of Charleston, an Irish benevolent society. This group ...
The James Simmons House at 37 Meeting St., Charleston, South Carolina. The James Simmons House is a late 18th-century house at 37 Meeting Street, Charleston, South Carolina which was, at one time, the most expensive house sold in Charleston. It was likely built for James Simmons, a lawyer. [1] By 1782, it was home to Robert Gibbes, a planter.
George W. Williams bought the "Lowndes Lot" on Meeting Street and already had plans for a large house with attached conservatory, a hot house, extensive gardens, and an observatory atop the main house by 1873. [1]
In 1985, at age 27, Meyer opened his first restaurant, Union Square Cafe. [5] Meyer's other restaurants and businesses include Gramercy Tavern, Blue Smoke and Jazz Standard, Shake Shack, Daily Provisions, Ci Siamo, The Modern, Cafe 2 and Terrace 5 at MoMA, Maialino (formerly at the Gramercy Park Hotel), Untitled at the North End Grill, Marta, Porchlight, GreenRiver, Union Square Events, and ...