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The shares do not carry voting rights for their holders but McMenamins indicated that investors could expect a 3% annual cumulative dividend and a 6.5% overall return. [8] The decision to open McMenamins to outside investors was in-part driven by impacts from COVID-19 with total revenue for McMenamins down 50% in the first 5 months of 2020. [9]
Formerly a Swedish church and union hall, the theater was re-opened as a McMenamins establishment in 1987. [2] The theater was known for featuring second-run films, until 2019 when a first-run operation was implemented, [ 3 ] and for serving beer, wine, and food.
The Grand Lodge is a hotel and theatre in Forest Grove, Oregon, owned by McMenamins Pubs & Breweries. The building was originally constructed as a Masonic home in the 1920s, [1] and was briefly the site of an orphanage. [2] McMenamins became the custodian of the property in 1999, [3] renovating and reopening it as McMenamins Grand Lodge in 2000 ...
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The Imbrie family arrived in the mid-1840s as part of Oregon's first flood of white settlers. The Imbries came to Oregon from the Midwest, but the family's patriarch, James Imbrie, Jr., was born and raised in the Kingdom of Fife on the southeast coast of Scotland. James' sons, James III and Robert, each developed farms in Washington County.
Brian McMenamin was born in Portland, Oregon, in 1957 to Robert W. and Pat McMenamin. [1] He was raised in Northeast Portland where he attended Catholic schools, including local Madeleine Grade School [1] and Jesuit High School in nearby Beaverton. [1]
The Boon Brick Store is a historic building in Salem, Oregon, United States. It was built as a general store by John D. Boon who became the first Oregon State Treasurer. It also once served as Oregon's first State Treasury. [2] It is now a brewpub owned by the McMenamins chain known as Boon's Treasury. [3]
The earliest newspaper in Oregon was the Oregon Spectator, published in Oregon City from 1846, by a press association headed by George Abernethy. [4] This was joined in November 1850 by the Milwaukie Western Star and two partisan papers – the Whig Oregonian, published in Portland beginning on December 4, 1850, and the Democratic Statesman ...