Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eldorado Ballroom is a former nightclub in the Third Ward, Houston, on the other side of the road from Emancipation Park. [1] The white brick and stucco Art Moderne building has 10,000 square feet (930 m 2) of space. [2] Caroline Love of Houston Public Media described it as "A pillar of Houston’s historic music scene". [3]
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places in inner Harris County, Texas, defined as within the I-610 loop within Harris County, Texas, but excluding those places in Downtown Houston and those in Houston Heights, which are listed separately.
October 1959 Wellston, MO: Lindy's Ballroom Every Sunday [64] [65] November 1, 1959 [66] Madison, IL: Kingsbury's Tavern November 8, 1959 St. Louis, MO Kiel Opera House: Dave Dixon's Shower of Stars with Chuck Berry, Little Milton, the Sheppards, Equadors, and Tommy Hodge [67] November 8, 1959 [68] Lindy's Ballroom November 13, 1959 Club Riviera
The Riverside Ballroom, 1560 Main St., hosted the Winter Dance Party on Feb. 1, 1959. It commemorates the historic night each winter with John Mueller's Winter Dance Party tribute show.
The only known surviving poster from Buddy Holly's performance at the Riverside Ballroom in 1959 has a new home in southern Florida.
The Rice continued to operate as a hotel under the management of the Houston Endowment until 1971. In 1957, Houston Endowment remodeled the Old Capital Club and the Flag Room from the previously existing Empire Room. They commissioned a five-story annex for a motor lobby and a second grand ballroom in 1958.
As the Des Moines Register marks its 175th year, today's historic front page is from Feb. 3, 1959: The Day the Music Died, when Buddy Holly was killed Historic front page from the Des Moines ...
In 1959, Edick hosted a television show at the Club Imperial, TV Party, which was broadcast on KTVI-2. [15] [5] In the early 1970s, Edick closed the nightclub and ran the Club Imperial as a banquet and reception hall. [11] [16] After the nightclub closed, dancers formed the non-profit St. Louis Imperial Dance Club. [3] [17]