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Known for its many celebrity-chef-run restaurants, downtown Neiman Marcus flagship store, and defining place in American history (the “grassy knoll,” where President John F. Kennedy was ...
A second Gas Monkey Bar N' Grill location was opened in International Terminal D at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport in March 2014. [14] [15] [16] The chief executive has indicated a desire to open a third Texas location somewhere other than the Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan area. [17] [18]
Sue Ellen's is a ladies bar or lesbian bar in Dallas, Texas' gayborhood of Oak Lawn. [1] [2] It first opened in Dallas on January 19, 1989, and moved to its current Throckmorton Street location in 2008. [3] [4] Sue Ellen's, a two-story nightclub, has a long history of being part of Dallas' queer nightlife, and is the state's oldest lesbian bar.
Sonny Bryan's Smokehouse is a well-known BBQ restaurant in Dallas, Texas that was founded by William Jennings Bryan Jr. (known as Sonny) in 1958 near the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. [1] [2] It has seven locations in the Dallas – Fort Worth Metroplex (DFW) while closing all franchise units in Utah by mid-2014. Sonny Bryan ...
Trees is an American live music venue opened in 1990 in the Deep Ellum district of downtown Dallas, Texas. The venue has hosted international touring musical acts such as Nirvana, [3] Snoop Dogg, [4] The Flaming Lips, [5] Death Grips, [6] Daughter, [7] The Wailers, [8] Nick Jonas, [9] and Run the Jewels. [10] It has received numerous accolades ...
The World's 50 Best Bars is an annual list that celebrates the best of the international drinks scene, providing a yearly ranking of bars, voted for by more than 650 drinks experts from across the globe. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Busch purchased Dallas's old City Hall on June 22, 1910, [3] demolished it, and constructed the new hotel at a cost of $1.8 million. The name was announced as the New Oriental Hotel . [ 4 ] It was designed by Thomas P. Barnett of Barnett, Haynes & Barnett of St. Louis in the Beaux Arts style .
Harris-Savage Home (RTHL #17586, [20] 2013), 5703 Swiss Ave.—Constructed in 1917 for P.A. Ritter, later occupants of the home included William A. Turner, a Texas oil field pioneer, and W.R. Harris, who was a prosecutor during the impeachment of Texas Governor James Ferguson by the Texas Legislature, and Wallace Savage, a former mayor of Dallas.