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The three main entry doors are set within a stepped-back limestone surround. The large main door is a double door set in the center of the elevation, and smaller single entry doors flank the main one. There are ornamental cast bronze grilles above wave-like lintels atop the doors. The central grille depicts the stage coach, steam ship and mail ...
Built circa 1740, this historic structure is a two-and-one-half-story, rectangular, limestone building. A two-story, four-bay, western addition and one-story rear wing was built in 1852. The building has a slate covered gable roof. [2] Kemp's Hotel was originally built circa 1740 by Daniel Levan, a Huguenot immigrant from Hockenheim.
At ground level was the kitchen, grill, and dining room. [27] The entrance lobby on Lexington Avenue connected with an office to the south, a baggage entrance and women's lounge to the north, and a lounge to the east. The restaurant was originally located in the 48th Street wing, while the grill was placed behind the elevators to the east.
In 1983, Mary Lou Dobrydnia was a 29-year-old Peoria resident who taught and coached at Limestone Community High School in Bartonville. She had often eaten at the Skewer Inn, usually opting for a ...
A new restaurant chain featuring Southern and Appalachian foods is coming to Lexington. Tupelo Honey Southern Kitchen & Bar, which started in Asheville, N.C., in December 2000 is planning to open ...
These panels are slightly recessed and rest on the limestone facing the raised basement wall. A plain limestone frieze runs horizontally across the facade, extending from the tops of the bays to a slightly projecting sandstone cornice. The frieze bears the inscription "United States Post Office" and "Clarkston, Washington."
The Charles E. Chamberlain Federal Building & Post Office is a two-story, rectangular, Classical Revival structure of ochre limestone, with some Art Deco details. It measures 223 feet by 132 feet. The symmetrical facade consists of a broad center section with flanking entrance blocks.
Lime Rock (Limerock) is a village and historic district in Lincoln, Providence County, Rhode Island, United States, near Rhode Island Route 146.The village was named after the limestone quarries in the area, which started in the 17th century, and continue to the present where Conklin Limestone Company now operates.