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Salisbury House of Canada Ltd. is a restaurant chain based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Known locally as "Sals", the chain is considered a Winnipeg institution. The first Salisbury House restaurant was founded in downtown Winnipeg in 1931 by Ralph Erwin (September 2, 1902 – June 5, 1983), [2] who named the venture after the salisbury steak.
Salisbury House or Salisbury Farm and variations may refer to: in Canada. Salisbury House (Canada), a restaurant chain; in England. Cecil House, the London home of the earls of Salisbury; Salisbury House, Edmonton, a late 16th/early 17th century building in Edmonton, London; in the United States (by state then town)
This is a list of corporations based in Winnipeg. This includes businesses completely owned and operated out of Winnipeg , as well as corporations that have significant operations (manufacturing, etc.) in Winnipeg, such as American-owned companies that base their Canadian division in Winnipeg (as in the case of Lifetouch Canada ). [ 1 ]
Salisbury House was modeled after the King's House in Salisbury, England, [3] contains 42 rooms and measures just over 22,000 square feet (2,000 m 2). The property is owned and operated by the Salisbury House Foundation and is open to the public for tours, public events, and private rentals.
The Esplanade Riel was the only bridge with a restaurant in North America. Its first restaurant was a Salisbury House. [4] Salisbury House is a chain restaurant local to Winnipeg. [5] The next tenant was Chez Sophie sur le pont (on the bridge), which opened in the summer of 2013 and closed in February 2015. [6]
It was saved by local efforts and moved to its current location on the former Salisbury estate near the museum and next to Salisbury House. It was donated to the American Antiquarian Society, which promptly gave it to the Worcester Art Museum, both of which were founded by Stephen Salisbury III. The museum undertook to restore the much-altered ...
James Armstrong Richardson II, businessman and politician, for whom the Winnipeg airport was named; Agnes Benidickson (raised in Winnipeg), first female chancellor of Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario; William Moore Benidickson, Dauphin-born Member of Parliament for Kenora—Rainy River, husband of Agnes Benidickson
The Salisbury House is an historic house at 61 Harvard Street in Worcester, Massachusetts. The Greek Revival building was constructed between 1836 and 1838 by Stephen Salisbury II, son of Worcester merchant Stephen Salisbury I whose 18th century mansion stands nearby. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. [2]