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The Big Chicken in action. The restaurant was built in 1963 at 12 Cobb Parkway, on the newly constructed stretch of Highway 41, the first divided highway in Cobb County. . Taking advantage of the prime location on the new and quicker route for travelers on U.S. 41, Johnny Reb's Chick, Chuck and Shake owner S. R. "Tubby" Davis erected the 56-foot (17-meter) tall structure over his restaurant in ...
The restaurant is known for continuing the cooking traditions of MacKenzie and her successor, Margaret Lupo, who owned the Tea Room from 1962 until 1994. It has hosted many famous visitors, including Dalai Lama , John Lewis , James Brown , Beyonce , Hillary Clinton , Alan Jackson , and Jimmy Carter , who ate at Mary Mac's so frequently he had a ...
Buckhead is the uptown commercial and residential district of the city of Atlanta, Georgia, comprising approximately the northernmost fifth of the city.Buckhead is the third largest business district within the Atlanta city limits, behind Downtown and Midtown, and a major commercial and financial center of the Southern U.S.
A restaurant in Georgia is proving that delivery — of the comedic variety — is really good for business. On Nov. 17, Al Zein Shawarma & Grill, a Syrian restaurant in Alpharetta, Georgia that ...
Here are restaurants in Richmond and Columbia counties that passed recent food-service inspections between March 29 and April 4 with scores of 100, without a single health violation: Augusta ...
Here are the Georgia Department of Health's restaurant inspection scores for Chatham County, conducted Dec. 6–Dec. 12, 2023. ... Chatham County restaurant inspections conducted Dec. 6-Dec. 12 ...
The Varsity is a restaurant chain in Atlanta, Georgia. [2] The main branch of the chain was the largest drive-in fast food restaurant in the world, [3] taking up two city blocks and accommodating up to 800 diners. The main location ended car-side service in 2020. [4]
The Dillard House is a restaurant in Dillard, Georgia, known for its "family style" menu and Southern cooking. It traces its origins to the 1910s, when A. J. Dillard, a descendant of John Dillard, and his wife Carrie opened their stone house to boarders. With the improvement of local transportation infrastructure after World War II, it evolved ...