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The replica of the Alamo built for John Wayne's film The Alamo (1960). Alamo Village is a movie set and tourist attraction north of Brackettville, Texas, United States.It was the first movie location built in Texas, originally constructed for and best known as the setting for The Alamo (1960), directed by John Wayne and starring Wayne, Richard Widmark, Laurence Harvey and Frankie Avalon.
In 1882, the family founded the Alamo Ranch, 3 mi (4.8 km) south of the town of Mancos on homesteaded land. By 1895 the family owned 1,000 acres (400 ha) of heavily-mortgaged land. [2] Richard Wetherill married Marietta Palmer on December 12, 1896 in Sacramento, California. [3]
The Alamo Ranchhouse, near Steamboat, Nevada, is a historic "plantation style mansion" that was built in 1887. Also known as the Moffat Ranchhouse , it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
Alamo will be housed under a new corporate division called Sony Pictures Experiences, and the chain will continue to operate all 35 of its locations across 25 metro areas in the U.S., the ...
Sony Pictures Entertainment has acquired Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, the theater chain that inspired a passionate following with its creative cocktails, extensive food menu and strict “no talking ...
During this period, the building was used as a filming location for the TV shows, "Friday Night Lights" and "Walker, Texas Red", as a school in both cases. [12] [5] [4] In 2016, in the wake of budget cuts, the district put the Baker School on the real estate market. [12] They had previously suggested selling the school in 2011. [13]
In the series, Dutton Ranch is witness to plenty of drama – and the same can be said for Chief Joseph Ranch in real life. The ranch’s lodge and barns was built in the early 1900s (Yellowstone ...
Vance Building (after 1930), 207-209 Alamo Plaza, a two-story brick building rebuilt after a fire in the 1920s or 1930s. [4] Old Joske's Building (1888 or later), 111-115 North Alamo, originally a two-story, six-bay brick commercial building, designed in 1888 by James Wahrenberger. Its main façade was plastered over in the 1900s.