Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Triay was a Minorcan settler who came to St. Augustine from Andrew Turnbull's New Smyrna colony. The Triay family owned the home through 1834, and the original house stood on the site as a residence and served in various commercial capacities until 1904 when a two-story house was built.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Bonefish Grill; Boston Sea Party (defunct) Bubba Gump Shrimp Company; California Fish Grill; Calumet Fisheries, Chicago; Cameron's Seafood Market; Captain D's; The Clam Shack, Maine; Colonnade (defunct) Coral Reef Restaurant; The Crab Claw Restaurant, St. Michaels, Maryland; Driftwood Inn and Restaurant, Vero Beach, Florida; East Coast Grill ...
In 1972, the sons of Elizabeth Morley Towers bought her the Joaneda House for $35,000. [4] Towers was a member of the Historic St. Augustine Preservation Board (HSAPB) and donated the house to the Board. The Joaneda House Development Project began in 1976 and was completed in 1977.
Martin Luther King Jr. of the SCLC was arrested on the steps of the Monson Motor Lodge restaurant, June 11, 1964. He wrote a "Letter from the Saint Augustine Jail" to his friend, Israel S. Dresner , in New Jersey, encouraging rabbis to come to Saint Augustine and take part in the movement.
Jesse was born in 1724 or 1726, and arrived in St. Augustine in 1736 at the age of ten or twelve, sent there by William Walton, Sr., New York's most successful merchant, probably aboard a Walton Company sloop captained by his uncle Abraham Kip. [6] Kip made at least twenty passages between New York and St. Augustine from 1732 to 1739. [7]
Sigurd Jonny Hansen was born in Seattle, the eldest of three sons; his brothers are Norman and Edgar. Their father, Sverre Hansen, was descended from a long line of Norwegian -ancestry fishermen. His father and grandfather pioneered opilio crab fishing in Alaska as a way of giving crab boats a chance to earn money year-round rather than in ...
"My Three Sons" are now grown-up with children of their own. From 1960 to 1972, Fred MacMurray starred as the widowed dad to three boys: Mike, Robbie and Chip. (And, eventually, the adopted Ernie.)