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Beer garden. The Bohemian Hall and Beer Garden has a big indoor and outdoor bar complex. The bar complex can hold 800 people and is open year-round. [5] Food that the bar serves is Czech specialties. [6] There is a linden tree that was planted by Václav Havel. [2] There are old signs and flags from the Czech Republic inside the bar.
Bohemian Hall and Beer Garden; Bohemian National Hall; C. Czech Center New York; J. Jan Hus Presbyterian Church; S. St. John the Martyr Church (New York City) Y ...
Bohemian Hall may refer to: in the United States. Bohemian National Hall at 321 East 73d Street on the Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York; Bohemian Citizens' Benevolent Society, also known as Bohemian Hall and Park, in Astoria, Queens, New York; Bohemian National Home, in Detroit, Michigan; Czech Hall in Yukon, Oklahoma
The following list of Bohemian Club members includes both past and current members of note. Membership in the male-only, private Bohemian Club takes a variety of forms, with membership regularly offered to new university presidents and to military commanders stationed in the San Francisco Bay Area .
Bohemian National Hall (between 1st and 2nd Avenue), 321 E 73rd Street, New York, NY 10021 Interior. The Bohemian National Hall (Czech: Česká národní budova) is a five-story edifice at 321 East 73rd Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. [1] Constructed between 1895 and 1897 in neo-Renaissance style by architect ...
More: As beer garden season returns to the Wilmington area, here are 11 favorites to check out Speaking of places to check out, March was a busy week and brought quite a few new restaurants to town .
The Z.C.B.J. Tolstoj Lodge No. 224, also known as Bohemian Hall or Tolstoj Sokol Lodge, [1] is a historic building in rural Linn County southeast of Scio, Oregon, United States, that was built in 1911. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 14, 1995. [2] It historically served as a meeting hall for the Czech ...
Opened in 1855 by Charles Ignatious Pfaff, the original Pfaff's was modeled after the German Rathskellers that were popular in Europe at the time. Charles Pfaff's beer cellar was located on Broadway near Bleecker Street (before 1862, Pfaff's address was given as 647 Broadway; after 1865, its location was advertised as 653 Broadway) in Greenwich Village, New York City.