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Before becoming a hotel, Hotel Emma was an American brewery established in 1881 as the J.B. Behloradsky Brewery. [4] In 1883, the San Antonio Brewing Association acquired the company. [5] By 1916, Pearl was the largest brewery in Texas and the only brewery to survive Prohibition. [6] In 2001, the brewery officially closed.
From a Southern Pacific Company brochure (c. 1916) From "Great San Antonio,the city of destiny and of your destination," 1923, page 23 Hot Sulphur Wells Bathhouse at Hot Wells, San Antonio, pre-1923 From "Great San Antonio,the city of destiny and of your destination," 1923, page 23
[24] [25] Although spa activity had been central to Saratoga in the 1810s, by the 1820s the resort had hotels with great ballrooms, opera houses, stores, and clubhouses. The Union Hotel, first built in 1803, had its own esplanade, and by the 1820s had its own fountain and formal landscaping, but with only two small bathhouses.
Lilliana M. Owens, S.L. (May 13, 1898 - September 27, 1992) was an American historian, writer, educator and Catholic nun. She was known for her historical writing ...
Lilliana Ketchman was born June 23, 2008 to Stacey and Christopher Ketchman and has an older brother, Caden. [5] Her mother is a psychologist and dancer while her father is a piano player and psychologist. [6] Her family is from Fayetteville, North Carolina, [6] where she attended Campaneria Ballet School. [7]
This page was last edited on 10 November 2024, at 16:26 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Ginger girls were a duet: Lottie Gee (née Charlotte O. Gee; 1886–1973), dancer and soprano, and Effie King, dancer and contralto (photo in New York Age, June 12, 1913, p. 6 Newspapers.com; subscription required). Effie King was the stage name of Anna Green (maiden; 1888–1944), who in 1907, married actor Frank Henry Wilson (1885–1956).
García was born on August 19, 1966, [6] in the Panama Canal Zone. [8] At three months old she went to Spain. She then spent eight years of her life in Spain due to her Puerto Rican father's employment with the American Embassy, and was educated on an American military base, leading her to describe herself as a "military brat".