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Blue Boar Cafeterias was a chain of cafeteria-style restaurants based in Louisville, Kentucky. The first Blue Boar was opened in 1931. [1] Once a major presence in metro Louisville, it is still remembered for its old downtown location on Fourth Avenue near Broadway. During the 1930s, Guion (Guyon) Clement Earle (1870–1940) served as ...
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View of Main Street, Louisville, in 1846. The history of Louisville, Kentucky spans nearly two-and-a-half centuries since its founding in the late 18th century. The geology of the Ohio River, with but a single series of rapids midway in its length from the confluence of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers to its union with the Mississippi, made it inevitable that a town would grow on the site.
A new restaurant from a prestigious Chicago-based chef is coming soon to Louisville. Chef Jenner Tomaska and Katrina Bravo, the husband and wife duo behind the fine-dining restaurant Esmé in ...
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The hotel formerly had a historic restaurant called the Oakroom, which was Kentucky's only AAA Five Diamond Restaurant Award winner, one of 44 in the nation. [35] It closed in 2018 and was converted to a ballroom. [36] The Rathskellar, decorated with Rookwood Pottery, was a rare and distinctively Seelbach south-German influenced restaurant. [34]
Franklin Roosevelt visits Louisville -- looking east on Walnut (now Muhammad Ali), October 22, 1932. The 1939 world premiere of ``One Million B.C.,'' staring Victor Mature of Louisville, at Loew's ...
Lynn's Paradise Cafe. Lynn's Paradise Cafe was a restaurant in The Highlands neighborhood of Louisville, Kentucky.It had been open since 1991, originally in the Crescent Hill neighborhood, until it moved into a former grocery store in The Highlands.