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Marion's Piazza is a pizzeria chain based in Dayton, Ohio. Established in 1965 by Marion Glass, the company operates nine restaurants throughout the greater Dayton area. Marion's son, Roger Glass, took over as CEO after Marion's death in 2006 and continued to manage the company until his passing in August of 2022. [1]
The Pine Club was founded in 1947. Jim Sullivan owned the restaurant from 1947–1954, Lloyd Meinzer from 1954–1979, and Dave Hulme from 1979–2018; [2] it was sold in 2018 in a private sale with the new owner undisclosed.
Cassano's Pizza King, currently operating under the brand Cassano's, is a pizzeria chain based in Dayton, Ohio which produces Dayton-style pizza.Established on June 4, 1953, by the grocer Victor "Vic" J. Cassano, Sr. (June 4, 1922 – January 1, 2002) and his mother-in-law Caroline "Mom" Donisi, the company currently (2005) operates 34 Cassano's Pizza King restaurants in the Dayton area, and ...
Uncle Ray's Restaurant in Canal Fulton will feature home-cooked meals from Middle Eastern dishes to pizza, burgers & seafood.
The Dayton Biltmore Hotel is a historic former hotel built in 1929 and located at the junction of First and Main Streets in downtown Dayton, Ohio, United States.It was converted to senior citizen housing in 1981 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
The first Marion's was Dayton's first eat-in pizza restaurant. [10] [7] Marion Glass had operated a Cassano's franchise in the early 1960s. [13] Ron Holp, who had operated a Cassano's franchise from 1960 through 1964, opened his own pizza shop, Ron's Pizza, in 1963, according to the Dayton Daily News sparking the "Dayton
Roughly bounded by I 75, St. Clair St., west face of Patterson Blvd., Monument Ave., and Sixth St./Norfolk Southern Railroad line 39°45′39″N 84°11′32″W / 39.7609°N 84.1923°W / 39.7609; -84.1923 ( Downtown Dayton Historic
The Benjamin F. Kuhns Building is a historic commercial building on Main Street in downtown Dayton, Ohio, United States. Distinguished by its little-modified late nineteenth-century architecture, it has been named a historic site. Built of brick covered with a slate roof, the Romanesque Revival building features elements of stone and terracotta.