Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
McMenamins is a family-owned chain of brewpubs, breweries, music venues, historic hotels, and theater pubs in Oregon and Washington. Many of their locations are in rehabilitated historical properties; at least nine are on the National Register of Historic Places .
It is now a brewpub owned by the McMenamins chain known as Boon's Treasury. [3] Before being bought by McMenamins, it was known as Karr's Tavern. [4] The two-story Italianate-style brick structure was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. John D. Boon House at Mission Mill Museum was formerly located next to the store. [2]
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]
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 ...
The Bagdad Theatre is a movie theater in the Hawthorne District of Portland, Oregon, United States.It originally opened in 1927 and was the site of the gala premiere of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in 1975, and of My Own Private Idaho in 1991.
The Mission Theater and Pub is a movie theater and pub located in the northwest Portland, Oregon. [1] Formerly a Swedish church and union hall, the theater was re-opened as a McMenamins establishment in 1987. [2]
Back Stage Bar is located behind Bagdad Theatre in Southeast Portland's Richmond neighborhood. The interior has billiard tables, [1] vaulted ceilings, [2] three-story oriental rugs, and a sign from the Jockey Club, a defunct dive bar along North Killingsworth. [3]
Lola's Room is operated by McMenamins as a "secondary venue" on the second floor of the Crystal Ballroom, [1] [2] a historic building on West Burnside Street.The space is named after Lola Baldwin (1860–1957), one of the first policewomen in the United States.