Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
June 19, 1985 (420 Henry Mall, University of Wisconsin campus: Madison: Georgian revival-style building designed by Paul Cret and Warren Laird, built in 1912, where Elmer McCollum discovered vitamins A and B, Harry Steenbock found that vitamin D could be concentrated by irradiating food, Conrad Elvehjem isolated niacin, and Karl Link isolated the anticoagulant dicoumarol.
The Fess Hotel was a hotel/restaurant begun by George Fess in the 1850s two blocks east of the capitol in Madison, Wisconsin.Through various configurations and remodels, the hotel served all classes of travelers and diners under the Fess family until 1972 - one of the longest-running service establishments in Madison.
Tudor Revival-style house designed by Frank M. Riley and built in 1932 for Otto Schroeder, a prominent Madison undertaker. Artist Aaron Bohrod bought the place in 1959 and painted nature images inside. [62] He also had Herbert Fritz Jr. design the 1959 Contemporary-style garage and art studio. [63] 84: Frederick Schumann Farmstead: Frederick ...
The building was incomplete when he died in 1959, but was purchased in 1966 by the Wisconsin River Development Corporation and completed the next year as The Spring Green restaurant. [3] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2024. [4] In 1968, Food Service Magazine had an article about the newly opened ...
Piper and a partner co-founded the restaurant L'Etoile in Madison in 1976; Piper eventually assumed full ownership of the restaurant. Like Ovens of Brittany, the restaurant uses local meat and produce, including the wares of local farmers that are featured at the noted Dane County Farmers' Market (which occurs adjacent to the restaurant). [3]
English: Houses on the north side of the 2500 block of Coolidge Street in Madison, Wisconsin. The houses are part of the [[w: Coolidge Street-Myrtle Street Historic District|]], which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Fireside Dinner Theater is a historic dinner theater and special events venue in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin.The original building and several expansions were designed by Fort Atkinson-based architect Helmut Ajango, who also designed The Gobbler, and built in 1964.
The Hotel Washington was a building in Madison, Wisconsin, built at the end of the 19th century. [1] It housed several businesses during the 1970 through 1990s. It was an important cultural center in south central Wisconsin and served as a destination and important venue for members of the LGBT community from Wisconsin and northern Illinois, until its destruction by fire on February 18, 1996.