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November 4, 1993 (Roughly, Central Ave. from Depot St. to Third St. Marshfield: Includes many old brick businesses like the Thomas House Hotel built after the fire of 1887, the Romanesque Revival old city hall built in 1901, the Craftsman-styled Wisconsin Central depot built in 1910, and the eclectic-styled Hotel Charles built in 1925, which hosted JFK, Patsy Cline, and possibly John Dillinger.
Westfield is a village in Marquette County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 1,254 at the 2010 census. The village is located mostly within the Town of Westfield. A small portion extends east into the adjacent Town of Harris. The Marquette County fairgrounds is located within the village limits on the south side.
Birdie's is a counter-service restaurant and wine bar. [1]The restaurant's business and service models, which Austin Monthly calls a "new take", maintain a minimal front-of-house staff; it takes no reservations, all diners stand in line to place their initial orders and seat themselves, and further service is not assigned to a single server.
There is also the Town of Westfield in Sauk County. Westfield is a town located in Marquette County, Wisconsin. As of the 2020 census, the town had a total population of 789. [1] The Village of Westfield is located mostly within the town. The unincorporated community of Lawrence is also located in the town.
The Fieber family has owned the restaurant since 1936, and it is named after Glenn Fieber's stepfather Kenneth Salmon, known as Solly. When it opened, the restaurant was called Solly's Coffee Shop, but Glenn renamed it Solly's Grille in 1993 when he bought the restaurant from his mother.
The Adam and Mary Smith House was constructed in 1879 by Adam Smith, who had come to Wisconsin to do shingle work on the Wisconsin State Capitol. The Sun Prairie Water Tower , located at the junction of Columbus, Church and Cliff Streets, was designed by Frank Stegerwald and constructed in 1912 of stone, metal, and wood.
In 1909 the city of Madison approved building a structure to bring the scattered vendors together in one organized space. Madison architect Robert Wright designed the building with an I-shaped footprint, with the Prairie School's emphasis on the horizontal seen in its low-pitched roof, wide eaves, and horizontal coursing.
The John Bradley Winslow house at 131 Langdon St was built in 1893 as a 2.5-story generally cube-shaped Queen Anne-style house, with brick walls and hip roof. John B. Winslow was an attorney and judge who was appointed to the state Supreme Court in 1891, shortly before he built this house, and became Chief Justice in 1907.