Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1978 the family opened a bagel restaurant in Orange, Connecticut, under the name “H. Lender and Sons”; two years later they opened a second one in Hamden. After Lender's Bagels was sold to Kraft Foods, the name of the restaurant was changed to S. Kinder Restaurants. The name is derived from Yiddish esst, kinder, meaning eat, children. [9]
Hamden Connecticut's Sleeping Giant Mountain from the Quinnipiac river. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 33.3 square miles (86 km 2), of which 32.8 square miles (85 km 2) is land and 0.5 square miles (1.3 km 2), or 1.62%, is water.
Roughly bounded by Hamden town line, Mansfield, Hazel & Division Sts., Winchester Ave., and Sherman Parkway 41°19′16″N 72°55′55″W / 41.321111°N 72.931944°W / 41.321111; -72.931944 ( Winchester Repeating Arms Company Historic
One Financial Plaza 335 (102) 26 1975 Hartford Also known as the Gold Building. Tallest building in Connecticut constructed in the 1970s. Office 13 Foxwoods: 325 (99) 26 2007 Ledyard: Hotel/Casino 14 Knights of Columbus Building: 321 (98) 23 1969 New Haven Office 15= 2 Park Place 309 (94) 25 Hartford Twin tower of 24 Park Place Residential 15=
Originally proposed as part of the Church Street Redevelopment Project in 1957, after many plans and alterations, it opened in 1967. The mall was designed by New York architects Lathrop Douglas, with two levels and 165,000 square feet (15,300 m 2).
CT New Haven [1] is the second largest division of Connecticut Transit, providing service on 24 routes in 19 towns within the Greater New Haven and Lower Naugatuck River Valley areas, with connections to other CT Transit routes in Waterbury and Meriden, as well as connections to systems in Milford and Bridgeport at the Connecticut Post Mall.
A Clarion hotel in Hamden, Connecticut A Comfort Suites in Laredo, Texas Clarion Collection Hotel Atlantic in Sandefjord, Norway Cambria Chicago Magnificent Mile. Choice Hotels International is the parent company of a number of hotel brands split among various market segments, in addition to a vacation rentals brand.
Edgerton Park, also known as the Frederick F. Brewster Estate, is a 20-acre (8.1 ha) public park on Whitney Avenue, straddling the New Haven–Hamden town line in Connecticut. It is site of the demolished Victorian home of Eli Whitney II , known as "Ivy Nook".