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Huss Brewing Company: Tempe, AZ [24] Kitsune Brewing Company: Phoenix [25] LazyG Brewhouse: Prescott, AZ [26] Lumberyard Brewing Company: Flagstaff [18] [27] Mother Bunch Brewing (now closed), Phoenix [28] Mother Road Brewing Company: Flagstaff [29] North Mountain Brewing Company: Phoenix [30] Old Bisbee Brewing Company: Bisbee [31]
The company also owns the Wynkoop Brewing Company, Phantom Canyon Brewing, and several restaurants. [6] In January 2013, Breckenridge Brewery announced that its facility, by then producing 64,000 barrels of beer per year, was at max capacity and would be moving to a new brewery complex.
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Bennett's Auto Bennett's Auto, 239 W. Route 66, Williams, AZ: 1930's Modern Style Gas station during heyday of Route 66 when gas sold for $0.16/gallon [2] The Postal Telegraph Co. The Postal Telegraph Co., 239 W. Route 66, Williams, AZ: 1910 [2] Operated until 1940's Unknown named original building Unknown Building, 229 Route 66, Williams, AZ ...
Williams (Havasupai: Wii GvĘžul [4]) is a city in Coconino County, Arizona, United States, located west of Flagstaff. Its population was 3,023 at the 2010 census. [5] It lies on the routes of Historic Route 66 and Interstate 40. It is also the southern terminus of the Grand Canyon Railway, which takes visitors to Grand Canyon Village.
This page was last edited on 26 January 2017, at 15:16 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Pollock Building Pollock Building, 104 N. 3rd Street, Williams, AZ: First floor constructed after 1901 fire; 2nd floor 1927 "Rusticated" Romanesque Revival: Originally bank, has been newspaper, telephone/telegraph office. Constructed of locally quarried dacite; 2nd story brick [1] [2] Grand Canyon Hotel Grand Canyon Hotel, 145 W. Route 66: 1892
Williams Depot is now the southern terminus for the Grand Canyon Railway, containing a gift shop, coffee stand, rest room facilities, ticket counter and restaurant. Although the Fray Marcos hotel closed in 1954, the original building remains and is the oldest poured-concrete structure in the state of Arizona. [14]