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In 2009, Amgen held a press conference at the restaurant to announce that the city would be included in the 2010 Amgen Tour of California. [7] The Sacramento chapter of The Salvation Army held its first meeting at the Firehouse Restaurant on May 19, 1885. On May 19, 2010, the Firehouse Restaurant hosted the chapter's 125th anniversary meeting. [8]
Sacramento Engine Company No. 3, the oldest remaining firehouse in Sacramento; The Firehouse Restaurant (1853), redbrick firehouse; (1960) restaurant; Old Sacramento Schoolhouse Museum [9] Eagle Theatre - only survived from 1849 to 1850 but has been reconstructed; Sam Brannan House built in 1853, was also Jones Hotel and Vernon House.
Location of Sacramento County in California Big Four House, after move to Old Sacramento area This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Sacramento County, California . This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Sacramento County , California ...
An illustration shows the original Sacramento Bee building at 1016 Third Street. The building housed the Daily and Weekly Bee, first published Feb. 3, 1857.
The Senator Hotel building is divided into two main reinforced-concrete masses, each nine stories in height and connected by a lobby building. [2] Stylistically modeled after the Palazzo Farnese in Florence, Italy and positioned to front on Sacramento's L Street, the L Street facade measures 165 feet (50 m) and includes a colonnaded archway along the entire front and side facades.
Don’t be fooled: Folsom’s “House of Mules” will serve over over 20 flavors of a popular cocktail. House of Mules coming soon to Folsom. Location spins off West Sacramento sports bar
A peek inside the Carmichael restaurant at 5938 Madison Ave. shows overhead lights stacked on top of chairs, buckets of paint on the sushi bar and ceiling tiles atop tables. Google reviews ...
The building was renovated in the mid to late 1980s to allow for an Italian restaurant to occupy the original tavern section and medical offices for other parts of the building. [3] It is rumored, with at least one historian agreeing, that in the 19th century there was a brothel upstairs frequented by Sacramento pioneers. [3] [5]