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The Multnomah County Poor Farm is a former poor farm located in Troutdale, Oregon, United States.Established in 1911, the building and its surrounding grounds operated as a poor farm housing the ill and indigent populations in the Portland metropolitan area at the beginning of the twentieth century, after the closure of a poor farm in the city's West Hills.
McMenamins is a family-owned chain of brewpubs, breweries, music venues, historic hotels, and theater pubs in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington. Many of their locations are in rehabilitated historical properties; at least nine are on the National Register of Historic Places
The Grand Lodge is a hotel and theatre in Forest Grove, Oregon, owned by McMenamins Pubs & Breweries. The building was originally constructed as a Masonic home in the 1920s, [1] and was briefly the site of an orphanage. [2] McMenamins became the custodian of the property in 1999, [3] renovating and reopening it as McMenamins Grand Lodge in 2000 ...
In 2016, Martin Cizmar of Willamette Week wrote, "Before it closed in 2014, Produce Row was a 40-year tradition of beer and music—home to multiple generations of Portland's music scene, going from the de facto homebase of Portland's pre-millennial indie-rock crowd to an unlikely IDM/EDM hang in the 2000s, before being revamped in 2008 into a New Portland beer hall and unlikely patio DJ hub ...
McMenamins's Cornelius Pass Roadhouse is located at 4045 NW Cornelius Pass Rd in Hillsboro, OR 97124. The property features a brewery, distillery, outdoor meadows and groves, the historic Octagonal Barn, Imbrie Hall, and the 1866 Italianate Roadhouse.
In 1997, the ballroom was re-opened by McMenamins, featuring Ringlers bar/restaurant on the first floor, the little sister of the historic Crystal Ballroom, Lola's Room, is located on the second floor, and the restored Crystal Ballroom on the third floor.
Formerly a Swedish church and union hall, the theater was re-opened as a McMenamins establishment in 1987. [2] The theater was known for featuring second-run films, until 2019 when a first-run operation was implemented, [ 3 ] and for serving beer, wine, and food.
Brian McMenamin was born in Portland, Oregon, in 1957 to Robert W. and Pat McMenamin. [1] He was raised in Northeast Portland where he attended Catholic schools, including local Madeleine Grade School [1] and Jesuit High School in nearby Beaverton. [1]