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The Jersey Lilly, Judge Roy Bean's saloon in Langtry, Texas, c. 1900. A Western saloon is a kind of bar particular to the Old West. Saloons served customers such as fur trappers, cowboys, soldiers, lumberjacks, businessmen, lawmen, outlaws, miners, and gamblers. A saloon might also be known as a "watering trough, bughouse, shebang, cantina ...
The Dixie Chicken claims to serve the most beer per square foot of any bar in the United States. [1] “One of the most recognizable restaurants in College Station,” [2] [3] the Dixie Chicken is known as Texas A&M's "favorite local watering hole." [4] The Dixie Chicken is the oldest and most famous bar in the Northgate district. [5]
Tommy Cooper's restaurant went on to become the most famous of the various Cooper family restaurants. [1] Tommy Cooper died in 1979; his restaurant was operated for a few years by Texas barbecue chef Kenneth Laird, [1] and then the Llano restaurant was acquired by current owner Terry Wootan in 1992. [2]
The bar’s namesake, the late Louis Canelakes, was a Dallas legend and a “mercurial genius,” according to a touching obituary in the Texas Observer. His mother, Alexandra, still works at her ...
Billy Bob's Texas is a country music nightclub located in the Fort Worth Stockyards, Texas, United States. It promotes itself as "The World's Largest Honky Tonk ," at 100,000 square feet of interior space and nearly 20 acres of parking space.
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The bar opened on July 27, 1970. It became a strip club in 1982. [25] The Lusty Lady is a pair of defunct peep show establishments, one in downtown Seattle and one in the North Beach district of San Francisco. The Lusty Lady was made famous by the labor activism of its San Francisco workers and the publication of several books about working there.
Sixth Street is a historic street and entertainment district in Austin, Texas, located within the city's urban core in downtown Austin. [2] Sixth Street was formerly named Pecan Street under Austin's older naming convention, which had east–west streets named after trees and north–south streets named after Texas rivers (the latter convention remains in place).