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Railway Exchange Building and Huber's Restaurant
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Railway Exchange Building and Huber's Restaurant : ウィキペディア英語版
Railway Exchange Building and Huber's Restaurant
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Huber's (originally The Bureau Saloon) is a restaurant in Portland, Oregon that bills itself as the city's oldest restaurant, having been established in 1879. Known for its turkey dinner and Spanish coffee, Huber's is often listed as a recommended restaurant to eat at in Portland. The establishment has also been featured in a film by Gus Van Sant. Huber's is within the Oregon Pioneer Building, also known as the Railway Exchange Building.
==History==

Huber's bills itself as the oldest restaurant in Portland, having been established in 1879 as The Bureau Saloon at the corner of 1st and Alder in downtown Portland.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=History of Huber's )〕 The name of the establishment changed to its current form after Frank Huber purchased The Bureau Saloon.〔 Throughout its history, the restaurant has occupied four separate locations, settling in the Pioneer Building (its current location) shortly after it was built in 1910.〔〔 During this time, Huber's was a saloon with a bar and spittoons where "downtown professionals spat their chewing tobacco".〔 After Huber died in 1912, Jim Louie took over management of the establishment. Louie, a stowaway Chinese immigrant, was the cook that helped to popularize the turkey dinners that Huber's is still known for today. During Prohibition, the saloon was converted into a restaurant and speakeasy so that food and alcoholic drinks could continue to be served.〔 A few years after Louie's death, his nephew Andrew became the sole proprietor of Huber's in 1952. In 1960, Andrew introduced his eleven-year-old son James Kai Louie ("Jim") to the business, who eventually became an owner of the restaurant. David and Lucille Louie also became owners with the passing of Andrew in 1988 and his wife Amy in 1990.〔
The Railway Exchange Building and Huber's Restaurant were added to the National Register of Historic Places on March 13, 1979.
In 2010, Huber's was featured as a stop on the "Sweet Cakes, Long Journey" walking tour, which explores the history of Portland's Chinatown, not for its food but for being owned by the same Chinese family for multiple generations.

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