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High Bank Distillery will open a restaurant in the historic post office space in Uptown Westerville. High Bank Distillery will open its third location at 28 S. State St. in Uptown Westerville Tuesday.
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Modern Apizza's brick oven. Modern Apizza is an American pizza restaurant in New Haven, Connecticut.Along with Frank Pepe Pizzeria Napoletana and Sally's Apizza, Modern forms what is informally referred to by locals as the "Holy Trinity" of New Haven-style pizza; the three pizza parlors are consistently ranked by food critics as some of the best pizza places in the world.
State Route 3, the "3-C Highway" which connects Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati, is the chief north–south thoroughfare of the old town center, known as Uptown Westerville, through which it is called State Street. Streetcars plied the avenues of Westerville from the late nineteenth century [40] but service was discontinued in 1929. [41]
The district is an irregular strip running NNE to SSW mainly along State Street in New Haven (between Bradley Street and the Mill River), one block west of Interstate 91, the highway which determines the district's eastern and southern borders. [2] The district was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1]
Restaurants on Upper State Street, East Rock's main commercial strip. The neighborhood is bordered on the north by the town of Hamden, on the east by Amtrak railroad tracks, on the southeast by Interstate 91 (between Exits 3 and 6), on the south by Trumbull Street, and on the west by Whitney Avenue.
New Haven is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in central New Haven Township, Huron County, Ohio, United States. [2] As of the 2020 census the population was 356. It has a post office with the ZIP code 44850. [4] It lies at the intersection of U.S. Route 224 with State Routes 61 and 598.
Permanent school that grew out of a meeting of New Haven citizens in 1864. New Haven architect Henry Austin donated the design. Used as a school until 1874 when African-American children began attending previously all white public schools. The building was then used by African-American community organizations. [19] 24