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The W. H. Faling House is a historic house located at 606 Parker St. in Cambridge, Nebraska.The house was constructed in 1909 by Nebraska architect William F. Gernandt.The home's Neoclassical design features a full height porch with groups of banded columns and a wide front door with symmetrical lights on the sides; the home is considered the best representation of Neoclassical architecture in ...
A Stoney River restaurant in Roswell, Georgia. Stoney River Steakhouse & Grill is a chain of steakhouses in the United States. There are thirteen Stoney River restaurants in Georgia, Maryland, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee, and North Carolina. The chain is owned by J. Alexander's.
Cambridge was originally called Pickletown, and under the latter name was laid out in the 1870s by J. W. Pickle. When the railroad was built through the settlement in 1880, the town was renamed Cambridge by railroad officials. The etymology of the name is uncertain: it may have been named after Cambridge, Massachusetts, or after Cambridge in ...
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SPB Hospitality is a multi-brand restaurant operator headquartered in Houston, Texas.The company owns several casual dining restaurant chain brands, including Logan's Roadhouse, Old Chicago Pizza + Taproom, J. Alexander's, Stoney River Steak House, Krystal Restaurants, Gordon Biersch Brewery Restaurants, and Rock Bottom Restaurants Breweries.
East Coast Grill & Raw Bar, commonly known as East Coast Grill, was a seafood and barbecue restaurant [1] in the Inman Square neighborhood of Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was opened by Chris Schlesinger in 1985. The restaurant was famous for their annual Hell Night which focused on super-spicy foods. [2]
Atherton left to open his own restaurant, and Hartnett purchased Murano from Ramsay in 2010. [3] [4] Wareing was made head chef of London based restaurant, Pétrus. [5] It went on to win two Michelin stars, but in 2008 the two chefs fell out; Wareing kept the restaurant premises and the stars, while Ramsay received rights to the name. [6]
Inman Square likely owes its name to Ralph Inman (1713–1788), described as a gentleman of fortune and a Boston merchant. The details of his life can be pieced together from articles in the New England and Genealogical Register, vols. 12, 14, 25, 26, 30, 55, 84, 112, and 136, as well as numerous other sources.