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Location of Price County in Wisconsin. ... Bloom's Tavern, Store and House: March 7, 1985 (#85000490) September 29, 2011: 396 S. Avon Ave.
Norwalk, Wisconsin was given its name by Selium McGary, one of the pioneers of Monroe County, who named it after Norwalk, Ohio, where he had previously lived. [5] [6] It is located on what was once the main line of the Chicago and North Western, which in the 1960s was converted into the Elroy-Sparta Bike Trail.
The core of the old downtown, including the 1887 Hein-Dott building, [69] the 1889 Lewis Pharmacy, [70] the 1891 Dott tavern, [71] the 1895 Romanesque Revival City Hall [72] (pictured), the 1896 Hotel Kleiner, [73] the 1909 Neoclassical Lohneis-Weisensel Block, [74] and the 1924 Georgian Revival Public Library.
In L. Michigan at east end of south pier at Kewaunee R. mouth, 0.5 mi east of WI 42 44°27′27″N 87°29′34″W / 44.4574°N 87.4929°W / 44.4574; -87.4929 ( Kewaunee Pierhead Lighthouse
The Tavern League of Wisconsin (TLW) is a trade association of alcoholic beverage retailers in the state of Wisconsin. The League was created in 1935, two years after the end of Prohibition, and today has 5,000 members. The League is headquartered in Fitchburg, Wisconsin. [1]
Tombstone was founded in Medford, Wisconsin, U.S., by Pep Simek, his brother, Ron Simek, and two other individuals in 1962. [1] [2] The name came from The Tombstone Tap, a tavern owned by the Simeks which was located across from a cemetery, hence its name.
Burr Oak Tavern: Burr Oak Tavern: December 28, 1988 : 315-317 East Capitol Drive: Hartland: 2.5-story Greek Revival-styled inn built for Patrick Kelley in 1853 along the Watertown Plank Road. In 1887 the west half was refitted as Dr. H.G.B. Nixon's medical office, and in 1937 expanded to handle emergencies.
Krueger ran the tavern until 1906, when it was replaced by the Spaeth Brewery until 1968, then Jim Vance's tavern. [ 21 ] [ 3 ] The W.D. Hoard Publishing Co. at 28 Milwaukee Ave W is a small office building, one-story cream brick in Neoclassical style, designed by George Ferry and built in 1908, from which Hoard's Dairyman magazine is published.