Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Georgian Room hosted "ladies who lunch" [3] [4] and has been described as "a popular luncheon spot for well-to-do Portland women". [ 5 ] In 2016, Grant Butler included the Georgian Room in The Oregonian 's list of "97 long-gone Portland restaurants we wish were still around", writing, "Since the 1930s, this was a spot where ladies lunched ...
In a 2013 city guide, ABC News said Seattle Best Tea was among the tea establishments with "high marks". [15] In 2021, The Seattle Times recommended the business "if you want the perfect cup of tea". [16] Christina Ausley included Seattle Best Tea in Seattle Metropolitan's 2018 list of the city's nine "essential" tea shops. [17]
Coon Chicken Inn was an American chain of three restaurants that was founded by Maxon Lester Graham and Adelaide Burt in 1925, [1] which prospered until the late 1950s. The restaurant's name contained the word Coon, considered a racial slur, and the trademarks and entrances of the restaurants were designed to look like a smiling caricature of an African American porter.
In 1922, a neoclassical building, designed by Aubrey V. O'Rourke, was built out of the ruins - The Metropole - and this building included a cinema and a ballroom, as well as a couple of bars and a restaurant, the Georgian Room. The Met closed on 11 March 1972 and the building was sold to British Home Stores who demolished it. [2] [3]
Oasis Tea Zone is a small chain of restaurants in the Seattle metropolitan area, in the U.S. state of Washington. [1] The Liu family opened the original cafe in Seattle's Chinatown–International District in c. 2001. The business has expanded to three locations, as of 2022, operating in the University District and in Edmonds. It has garnered a ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Pages for logged out editors learn more
On December 15, 1939, the Georgian Terrace Hotel's Grand Ballroom was the site of the Gone with the Wind Gala, whose attendees included Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, Vivien Leigh, Laurence Olivier, Olivia de Havilland, Claudette Colbert, Victor Fleming, Louis B. Mayer, David O. Selznick, Margaret Mitchell, and several other notable guests.
Roy Street Coffee & Tea at 700 Broadway E in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood. An example of a Stealth Starbucks, or a Starbucks location without corporate branding. Date: 25 October 2016: Source: Own work: Author: SounderBruce: Permission (Reusing this file)