Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[3] [1] As of 2011 there were at least 49 restaurants by some variant of that name in the New York City telephone directory, [4] including one named Not Ray's Pizza. [3] The first Ray's Pizza closed its doors on Sunday, October 30, 2011, following a legal dispute over rent and a lease that followed its owner's death in 2008. [5] [6] Half of the ...
The Greeneville section of Norwich Connecticut was named by William Greene. In 1826, Greene purchased land on both sides of the Shetucket River to develop. In 1828, he transferred the land to the Norwich Water Power Company, in which he was the largest shareholder. Norwich Water Power Company began construction on a dam in 1829.
The Carroll Building in Norwich, Connecticut, also known as the Flat Iron Building, was built in 1887. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1982. [1] It is included in the Downtown Norwich Historic District, which is also listed on the NRHP. Originally used as offices and retail stores, the building is now ...
Route 32 begins near Interstate 95 (about 0.5-mile (0.80 km) south of the road crossing as a continuation of Water Street). It is a freeway near the interchange with I-95, then becomes a four-lane arterial road up to SR 693, a short freeway that provides access to I-395.
Route 2 – Norwich, New London, Downtown Hartford: Signed as exits 54 (west) and 55 (east); no eastbound access to Route 2 west; Route 2 west not signed: 56: Governor Street – Downtown East Hartford: Access via SR 500 – I-84 east (Restricted Lanes) – Boston: Western terminus of I-84 Restricted Lanes: 66.56: 107.12: 57
Main Menu. News. News. ... to late actor Ray Liotta and the famous cheese-less pizza by Frank Pepe's: At Ozzy’s a thick, oregano-heavy smear of crushed California-grown Stanislaus tomato sauce ...
Taftville is a small village in eastern Connecticut, United States.It is a neighborhood of Norwich but has its own post office (ZIP Code 06380). It was established in 1866 as site for the large Taftville Mill, later Ponemah Mill.
A 1,075-acre (4.35 km 2) area in and near Hazardville was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 as the Hazardville Historic District. [4] The district is an irregularly shaped area that surrounds two interior areas that are not historical and are not included in the district.