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The original Huddle House in Decatur was established to give fans a place to eat after "the big game" on Friday nights. [citation needed] In 2006, Allied Capital acquired Huddle House for $124.1 million. [4] In 2009, Ares Capital acquired Allied Capital. [5] In April 2012, Ares sold Huddle House to Sentinel Capital Partners. [6]
Location of Morgan County in Alabama. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Morgan County, Alabama. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Morgan County, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many ...
Due to its strategic location, the town suffered heavy damage in the Civil War; the Todd House on Lafayette Street is one of only four buildings in Decatur to survive the war (the others being the Old State Bank, the Rhea-McEntire House, and the Dancy-Polk House, all outside the district). As the town was rebuilding from the war, a fire in 1877 ...
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Sep. 22—Decatur now owns the historic home of Judge James E. Horton, and the final moving date for the house should be finalized next week so it can become part of a planned civil rights museum.
The East Old Town Historic District, located near Decatur, Alabama, is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012. [1] The listing included 37 contributing buildings and one contributing site on 30 acres (12 ha). [1] It includes Greek Revival, and Bungalow/craftsman architecture. [1]
It lies south of the Bank Street-Old Decatur Historic District and east of the New Decatur–Albany Residential Historic District. New Decatur was founded in 1887 as a planned town and suburb of Decatur. The town was renamed Albany in 1916 and merged with "Old" Decatur in 1927. The district contains 48 buildings centered on 2nd Avenue.
The Southern Railway Depot is a historic building in Decatur, Alabama.The depot was built in 1904–05 along the Southern Railway line. Decatur had become a transportation hub of North Alabama by the 1870s, with its connections to the Tennessee River, the east–west Tuscumbia, Courtland and Decatur Railroad (later operated by the Memphis and Charleston Railroad and the Southern Railway), and ...