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Detroit: An Insiders Guide to Michigan. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-03092-2. Fisher, Dale (1996). Ann Arbor: Visions of the Eagle. Grass Lake, MI: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing. ISBN 0-9615623-4-X. Fisher, Dale (2005). Southeast Michigan: Horizons of Growth. Grass Lake, MI: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing. ISBN 1-891143-25-5.
Lannie's Bar-B-Q Spot | Selma, Alabama. Details: 2115 Minter Ave.; 334-874-4478 Lannie's Bar-B-Q Spot restaurant review: Our local food writer recommends the famous pulled pork sandwich with red ...
What you'll likely hear more of, if you listen carefully to the locals, is a pitched debate over which is better: Anchor Bar's wings or Duff's, which made its first wings just north of Buffalo in ...
Founded in 2007, D'Mongo's, the bar was featured on Esquire TV's Best Bars in America in 2014 [1] D'Mongo's was also featured on Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern on the Travel Channel . [ 2 ] Also, Detroit -based film production company, Margrave Pictures, filmed Boris the Porkchop Thief inside D'Mongo's.
The Jefferson–Chalmers Historic Business District is a neighborhood located on East Jefferson Avenue between Eastlawn Street and Alter Road in Detroit, Michigan.The district is the only continuously intact commercial district remaining along East Jefferson Avenue, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.
Anchor Bar lays claim to originating Buffalo wings on March 4, 1964, when the Bellisimo family fashioned them from discarded chicken parts as a late-night snack for a son and friends.. Another ...
The word "Bar" is above the entrance, formed in three dimensional painted sheet metal. One large window is located on the short side of the building, and eleven smaller ones on the long side. [4] The interior contains a curved, hardwood bar, with red and black panels inset along the bottom. Seating is in a series of red and black vinyl booths.
The shopping center would have been Michigan's first shopping center constructed on 8 Mile and Kelly Road but the idea was scrapped. The mall was developed in 1957 by Hudson's, a Detroit-based department store chain (and corporate predecessor of Target Corp) that also developed Northland Center, another Detroit area mall.