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El Chupacabra is a Day of the Dead-themed Mexican [1] / Tex-Mex [2] restaurant with two locations in Seattle: along Greenwood Avenue the Greenwood / Phinney Ridge area, and along Alki Beach Park in West Seattle. Previously, a third location operated in South Lake Union. The business is named after the legendary creature in American folklore. [3]
Salado (/ s ə ˈ l eɪ d oʊ / sə-LAY-doh) is a village in Bell County, Texas, United States. Salado was first incorporated in 1867 for the sole purpose of building a bridge across Salado Creek. In 2000, the citizens of Salado voted in favor of reincorporation, before which it was a census-designated place. The population was 2,394 at the ...
Chupacabra (roller coaster), a steel roller coaster located at Six Flags Fiesta Texas amusement park in San Antonio, Texas, U.S. Chupacabras (cycling race), an annual bicycle race in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico; El Chupacabra (restaurant), a restaurant in Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Built starting in 1852, the Stagecoach Inn of Salado, Texas, is thought to be the oldest extant structure in the village. The Inn was built as a stagecoach stop along the Chisholm Trail . The simple, two-story wood-frame building is in a frontier vernacular style.
The first chupacabra, or “goat sucker,” sighting was first reported in the mid-90s in Puerto Rico, per PBS. Since then, the creature has become part of Latin American folklore and pop culture.
The Col. Elijah Sterling Clack Robertson Plantation is a Southern plantation with a historic house located in Salado, Texas, USA. The National Register of Historic Places has listed it since April 5, 1983. [2] Robertson built the house in the late 1850s, completing the construction of the main house in 1860.
The Buttermilk Creek complex is the remains of a paleolithic settlement along the shores of Buttermilk Creek in present-day Salado, Texas. The assemblage dates to ~13.2 to 15.5 thousand years old. [1] If confirmed, the site represents evidence of human settlement in the Americas that pre-dates the Clovis culture. [2]
The George Washington Baines House is located in the city of Salado, Bell County, Texas. It was designated a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1981 [2] and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [3] George Washington Baines was the father of Joseph Wilson Baines, who was the father of Rebekah Baines, mother of Lyndon B ...