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The Keeler Tavern is an 18th-century historical building at 152 Main Street in the center of Ridgefield, Connecticut, United States.The property served as summer home to architect Cass Gilbert, who purchased it in 1907 and designed additions to the building as well as a garden.
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Ridgefield in Review, by Silvio A. Bedini (1958) Out of print, but used copies often available locally; History of Ridgefield, by George L. Rockwell, 583 pages, long out of print; The Barbour Collection of Connecticut Town Records, Volume 36, an index to Ridgefield births, marriages and deaths from 1709 to 1850. Genealogical Publishing Company ...
Ernest Gallo (March 18, 1909 – March 6, 2007) was the American co-founder of the E & J Gallo Winery. He was ranked 297th on the 2006 Forbes 400 list of billionaires. After the death of his parents, Ernest and brother Julio, along with their wives Amelia (1910–1993) and Aileen, raised their thirteen-year-old little brother Joseph.
Branchville Fields by John Henry Twachtman, ca. 1888. Weir Farm National Historic Site in Ridgefield and Wilton is considered part of Branchville. Administered by the National Park Service, Weir Farm commemorates the life and work of impressionist painter Julian Alden Weir and other artists who stayed at the site, [10] with notable visitors having included Childe Hassam, Albert Pinkham Ryder ...
The new El Gallo Bar and Restaurant will occupy the former IHOP at 214 W. Camp Street in East Peoria, a couple doors down from the owners’ current business Tacos El Gallo.
The West Mountain Historic District is a 425-acre (172 ha) historic district northwest of the center of Ridgefield, Connecticut in Fairfield County, Connecticut that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. It includes 12 contributing buildings. [1]
Samuel Keeler (1656–1713), founding settler of Ridgefield; Jeff Landau (born 1974), professional tennis player "Typhoid Mary" Mallon (1869–1938), who became famous for infecting people with typhoid, spent some time as a cook in town, where she infected some (according to brief front-page story in the July 22, 1909 Ridgefield Press)