Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The business was purchased by the Galfetti family in 1966. They expanded the footprint of the restaurant seven times. Brian Zechinelli and Karen (Galfetti) Zechinelli have run the restaurant since 1998. The restaurant has expanded to have 160-seats including twenty at the counter. [5] It is a family restaurant open seven days a week. [1]
The village is in southern Bennington County, in the southern part of the town of Stamford. It is bordered to the south by the towns of Clarksburg and Florida in Berkshire County, Massachusetts. Vermont Routes 8 and 100 pass through the village as its Main Street, leading northeast together 7 miles (11 km) to Heartwellville.
The village of Stamford is in the southern part of town, in the valley of the North Branch of the Hoosic River. According to the United States Census Bureau , the town has a total area of 39.5 square miles (102.3 km 2 ), of which 39.5 square miles (102.4 km 2 ) is land and 0.12 square miles (0.3 km 2 ), or 0.29%, is water.
The restaurant first opened in 1790, one year before Vermont joined the United States.
Route 8 (VT 8) is a state highway within Vermont. The highway runs 13.2 miles (21.2 km) from the Massachusetts state line in Stamford, where it continues south as Massachusetts Route 8, to VT 9 in Searsburg. VT 8 connects the southeastern Bennington County towns of Stamford, Readsboro, and Searsburg.
Cara Chigazola-Tobin, chef-owner of Honey Road, stands behind the bar at the Burlington restaurant July 29, 2021. Contact Brent Hallenbeck at bhallenbeck@freepressmedia.com.
Downtown Stamford, or Stamford Downtown, is the central business district of the city of Stamford, Connecticut, United States.It includes major retail establishments, a shopping mall, a university campus, the headquarters of major corporations and Fortune 500 companies, as well as other retail businesses, hotels, restaurants, offices, entertainment venues and high-rise apartment buildings.
Ye Olde Tavern is a restaurant in Manchester Center, Vermont, US, that is listed on the Vermont Register of Historic Places. [1] It was built by Aaron Sheldon from Dorset, Vermont , in 1790, making it the oldest inn in the state of Vermont.