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brhaltx

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Posts posted by brhaltx

  1. I always think it'll be a little warmer than the forecasts.  And it was...  We had some sleet in the northwest, but I don't think it stuck.  It may have hit 30 here, but is now 31 to 33 here, depending on who you ask.

  2. I have that very same picture. Do you know the location? That is the old Weingartens store at Yale and Eleventh St. in the Heights. The location later became a Top Value stamps redemption center. I have no clue what it became after the redemption center moved out. According to Google maps it is now a Lola eatery.

     

       Lola and more; there are 3 or 4 businesses in that building.

  3. Hello riofrio. :)

     

    Riofriotx found all of the directory listings I mentioned above, along with the Thresher ads and more.  Those city directories seem to be a pain to search...

     

    Ada Gibbs was Hugh's wife.

     

    The brother was Henry, born in 1892.  I think he died in 1953.  His residence in 1953 is listed as Galveston.  I don't know what he did after the Interurban Buffet.

     

    I think that the Bond Building on Fannin could be the same as the Bryan Hall building, since both were 3 stories...  Why tear one down (that looked good to me) to build another one of the same size?

  4. Interesting.  I don't think it was ever called Interurban Cafe.  Everything I've seen listed it as Interurban Buffet or The Interurban Buffet.

     

    But...  Since I've heard that it was essentially a bar that served food, what did they do during prohibition?   Guess you'd have to at least make it look like you were making your money by selling good. ;)

     

    Someone looked it up in the city directories for me; it's in 1915, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1932, 1936 as Interurban Buffet on Texas.  1937, 1939, 1940, and 1942, it's Interurban Buffet at 810 Fannin.  I'm guessing that it closed in 1942 or 1943, but I'm not sure about that.  I think that's what I was told.

     

    Your pictures are interesting, mainly because of P. Wolf/P.Wolff.  Charles P. Wolff was an owner/partner in The Interurban Buffet until 1928; he died in 1933.   Thanks for checking.

  5. I found a picture of the building at 810/812 Fannin in 1913; it was the "Bryan Hall" building at that time.  I haven't found anything else about it, but that may be the correct building, if the Bond building was built sometime in the 1940s.  (Could be why the Interurban Buffet closed; the owner died in 1941, his brother probably kept it open until the building was torn down.)

  6. Thanks Ross.  I was about to post that the blogger mentioned above (huge thanks for her for that and other research) found it at 810 Fannin in the 1937, 1939, 1940, and 1942 directories.

    Now to find a picture of that address..

     

    I did find another picture of the Binz building (1925, I think) from down the street that shows a Buffet sign on the front of the Binz building.

  7. I talked to my friend; he remembers the building, and his family was living on Craighead at the time of the fire.  He says someone was trying to save the building at the time it burned down.

    He didn't have much else to say about it otherwise.

    The family sitll owns land on Craighead.  He says that the casino property is owned by Rice, and the current building is a Rice data center.  (HCAD lists it as belonging to a company in New York.)

    • Like 1
  8. I remember there being a rice mill in the shadows of downtown back in the 90s. I think it was on Allen Parkway?

     

       There were grain silos on Memorial, between Memorial and Washington.   Between the cemetary and Studemont, I think.

  9.    I suppose the original poster is long gone...  But I went to Houston Sterling.  Before the OP was born. :(

     

       I remember that 7-Eleven sold to Stop-N-Go...  Maybe even that they "traded" areas.

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