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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. A nearby building was purchased for conversion into a theater and added to the ...
After the Hartwig family sold the building in the early 1990s, several restaurants operated in the building. The first was a Mexican restaurant called "Redondos" in 1995. Others included a roadside diner, "The Round Stone Restaurant", and "The New Gobbler". The last tenant went out of business in mid-2002. [citation needed]
Fort Atkinson: Fort Atkinson's old downtown, including the 1857 Italianate-styled Albert Winslow Grocery, the 1886 Dr. L.C. Bicknell Building (at left in photo), the 1894 Queen Anne-styled Andra saloon, the 1908 W.D. Hoard Publishing Co., and the 1929 Neoclassical Municipal Building. 36: Eli May House: Eli May House: September 14, 1972
By 1917 it was the largest dairy equipment company in the world, and employed 400 people in Fort Atkinson. [23] [3] The First National Bank at 70 N Main St is a Neoclassical building constructed in 1922. [24] [3] The Black Hawk Tavern at 9 Milwaukee Avenue West was built in 1915.
The Arthur R. Hoard House, also known as the George P. Marston House, is a historic residence in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, United States. The house was owned by several important early families in the town, including two mayors and a state representative.
In 1832, Milo Jones, a government surveyor, moved from Vermont to Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin, with his wife and two children, to establish a traditional dairy farm. This small family farm produced primarily cheese, but also raised pigs for their own consumption. [2] In 1849, Milo C. Jones was born and soon joined his family in working the farm.
Helmut "Mike" Ajango (November 30, 1931 – November 15, 2013) was an Estonian-born architect based in Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin in the United States. [1] [2] He designed more than 175 churches in southern Wisconsin as well as Fireside Dinner Theatre (1964) and The Gobbler. [1]
Fireside Theatre – Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin; Fulton Theatre – was located at West 46th Street in New York City for a few months in 1911 under the name Folies-Bergere; demolished; Gaslight Theatre – Enid, Oklahoma; La Comedia Dinner Theatre – Springboro, Ohio