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It has since operated as a restaurant. A further restaurant and public house, the River Inn, lies in Crosslee and was formerly the Crosslee Inn and the Pine Trees. [8] The village hosts a regular beer festival/ [25] A microbrewery, the Houston Brewing Company, also formerly operated from a building adjacent to the Fox and Hounds. [8]
Houston and Killellan Kirk; the modern, unified parish church. Houston and Killellan is a civil parish in the county and council area of Renfrewshire in the west central Lowlands of Scotland. It contains the villages of Houston and Crosslee, as well as a number of smaller settlements including Barochan and Killellan in its rural hinterland.
Cochrane's Place Nw Corner Of South Street And Main Street, Houston Village 55°52′09″N 4°33′03″W / 55.869103°N 4.550945°W / 55.869103; -4.550945 ( Cochrane's Place Nw Corner Of South Street And Main Street, Houston
The Houston Brewing Company was a brewery in the village of Houston, Renfrewshire, Scotland. It operated from 1997 to 2016. It operated from 1997 to 2016. For most of its existence was attached to, and operated in common with, the Fox & Hounds public house [ 1 ] and, as a result of its size, is classed as a microbrewery . [ 2 ]
Crosslee is a small village lying on the bank of the River Gryffe in the civil parish of Houston and Killellan, Renfrewshire, in Scotland. [1] It lies around half a mile south of the old village centre of Houston and immediately west of Craigends, although residential development has removed any significant open space between the three.
Big Daddy's Restaurants; Bikinis Sports Bar & Grill; Bill Knapp's; Blue Boar Cafeterias; Boston Sea Party; Bresler's Ice Cream; Briazz; Brigham's – a Boston-area ice cream parlor and restaurant chain that closed in 2013 [2] Britling Cafeterias; Bugaboo Creek Steakhouse; Burger Chef; Carrols Restaurant Group; Cheeseburger in Paradise; Chi-Chi ...
This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places in downtown Houston, Texas. It is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the Downtown Houston neighborhood, defined as the area enclosed by Interstate 10 , Interstate 45 , and Interstate 69 .
The old parish was united with Houston in 1760 although the church saw occasional use until 1771. The ruins of the kirk are a scheduled monument and the surrounding graveyard is a Listed Building. [1] The ruins stand some 4 miles (6 km) west of the centre of Houston, just off the Kilallan Road.