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Aldbourne has two public houses, the Blue Boar [40] and the Crown, [41] and a volunteer-run sports and social club. [42] There is a Co-op supermarket and a village shop that includes a post office and a cafe. Aldbourne has had a village library since the 1930s, housed for the last few decades in South Street.
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 ...
The Blue Boar is a pub on Castlegate in the city centre of York, in England. The Blue Boar was a Mediaeval inn on the street. Among its guests were Roger Cottam, envoy to Henry VII of England, and many Royalist soldiers preparing for the Siege of York. It was demolished in about 1730 and replaced by the current building, along with the ...
The facilities were originally managed by Blue Boar, a local company that had run a nearby petrol station before the M1 opened. Roadchef bought the services from Blue Boar in 1995. The main building was designed by Harry Weedon , the architect for Odeon Cinemas , while the layout and general buildings were designed by coordinating architect ...
A typical blue-plate special board, from the Red Arrow Diner in Manchester, New Hampshire. A blue-plate special is a discount-priced meal that changes daily. The practice was common from the 1920s in American and Canadian restaurants through the 1950s, especially in diners and greasy spoons.
Blue Boar may refer to: Blue Boar Quadrangle; Blue Boar Street in Oxford; Blue Boar Cafeterias, a defunct cafeteria chain in the Southern United States; Blue Boar cafe at Watford Gap services; The Blue Boar, a former public house in Grantham; Blue Boar (bomb), a cold war era television-guided bomb; Blue Boar, York, a pub
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Snap is an abandoned village near Aldbourne in Wiltshire, England.It is unusual in that it was not abandoned until the 20th century. The village was recorded in 1268 under the name of Snape.