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  2. Budd Dairy Food Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budd_Dairy_Food_Hall

    Budd Dairy Food Hall is a food hall in the Italian Village neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio. The Cameron Mitchell Restaurants-run hall holds ten foodservice locations, three bars, and indoor, patio, and rooftop seating. It is situated in the historic Budd Dairy Company building, a former milk processing and distribution facility. The space was ...

  3. Tosheff's Restaurant and Hotel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tosheff's_Restaurant_and_Hotel

    By 1923, the new building housed a jeweler, barber, men's clothing store, and a billiards hall. Tosheff's restaurant was located on the first floor, and his hotel on the second (the South End Hotel, later Tosheff's Hotel). Tosheff sold the restaurant near the start of World War II, and operated the hotel until he sold the entire building in ...

  4. Columbia Larrimer Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbia_Larrimer_Building

    The Columbia Larrimer Building is a historic building in Downtown Columbus, Ohio.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. The building is significant for its storefront design and craftsmanship, along with the front interior installed by the Bott Brothers when they moved their bar there in 1905.

  5. T. Marzetti Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._Marzetti_Company

    By 1955, Marzetti's upstairs kitchen of the restaurant became a full-scale factory, and the Marzetti brand of salad dressings found its way into grocery stores throughout Ohio. By the late 1960's, the company built a dressing production plant in Columbus' Clintonville neighborhood on Indianola Avenue.

  6. Kahiki Supper Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kahiki_Supper_Club

    In 1997, the restaurant was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. At the time, it was the only tiki restaurant in Ohio, and the only remaining supper club in Columbus. [3] It closed on August 26, 2000 due to prohibitively high maintenance costs and a significant loss of business, and so the property was sold to Walgreens.

  7. Dobbies Garden Centres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dobbies_Garden_Centres

    Dobbies Garden Centre, Aberdeen. The business was founded in 1865 by James Dobbie, who created a seeds business named Dobbie & Co. in Renfrew, Scotland.After being awarded the Royal Warrant for Gardeners and Nurserymen to the Royal Household, the company expanded into a seed catalogue business, where it built up a customer base of 50,000 over the following century.

  8. Corinium Dobunnorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corinium_Dobunnorum

    Roman high relief sculpture, Corinium Museum, Cirencester. As yet, no temples have been located, although numerous fine sculptures show much religious activity in the town. The missing Christian bishop represented by a deacon at the Council of Arles in 314 may come from Corinium. The town was fortified in the late 2nd century.

  9. Abbey House, Cirencester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbey_House,_Cirencester

    Abbey House was a country house in the English county of Gloucestershire that developed on the site of the former Cirencester Abbey following the dissolution and demolition of the abbey at the Reformation in the 1530s. The site of the dissolved abbey of Cirencester was granted in 1564 to Richard Master, physician to Queen Elizabeth I. Dr.