Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Billy' in the restaurant's name derives, not from the name of a family member, but from the partnership with Sydney celebrity chef Bill Granger under which the restaurant was founded. [4] Kwong later became the sole owner of the restaurant under the original name. [4] In 2014 Kwong relocated the restaurant to larger premises at Potts Point. [5]
Pages in category "Houses in Potts Point, New South Wales" ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ...
Century 21 Real Estate; The Children's Place; Chubb Corp. Church and Dwight; Coach USA; Commerce Bancorp; Comodo Group; Cooper Chemical Company; Curtiss-Wright; Cytec Industries; DRS Technologies; Emerson Radio; Foodtown; Foster Wheeler Corporation
Bomera and Tarana are two jointly heritage-listed residences at 1 Wylde Street in the inner city Sydney suburb of Potts Point, New South Wales, Australia.Bomera was designed by John Frederick Hilly and built in 1856 with alterations by Sheerin & Hennessy and built by Wheelwright & Alderson c. 1902.
The town of St. George occupies a peninsula and islands on the west side of Penobscot Bay in the Mid Coast region of southern Maine. The southernmost mainland tip of the peninsula is Marshall Point, where the Marshall Point Light is located. The finger of land between the lighthouse and the village of Port Clyde is where the Land's End colony ...
Pottsville is a town in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia in Tweed Shire.At the 2021 Census, Pottsville had a population of 7,209. [1] Bill Potts owned the first house in Pottsville around and the location was initially named Potts Point.
Pennellville Historic District / ˈ p ɛ n ɪ l v ɪ l / is a residential district located in Brunswick, Maine.To locals, the neighborhood is known simply as "Pennellville." There are several historic ship captains' houses in the District; much of the real estate is waterfront property.
Rock Rest is a historic house and African-American traveler's accommodation at 167 Brave Boat Harbor Road in Kittery, Maine.The property was operated as a summer guest house by Clayton and Hazel Sinclair between 1946 and 1977, and is one of the few known places in Maine that explicitly welcomed African-American guests in an era when racial discrimination in public accommodations was common.