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・ Salustiano de Olózaga y Almandoz
・ Salustiano Sanchez
・ Salut
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・ Saltwood Castle
・ Saltwood Miniature Railway
・ Saltwood, Shorncliffe
・ SaltWorks, Inc.
・ Saltwort
・ Salty
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Salty Dawg Saloon
・ Salty dog
・ Salty Dog (band)
・ Salty dog (cocktail)
・ Salty dog (slang)
・ Salty Dog Blues
・ Salty du Rand
・ Salty Holmes
・ Salty liquorice
・ Salty O'Rourke
・ Salty Parker
・ Salty Saltwell
・ Salty Walt & the Rattlin' Ratlines
・ Salty's Lighthouse
・ Saltykov


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Salty Dawg Saloon : ウィキペディア英語版
Salty Dawg Saloon

The Salty Dawg Saloon is a well-known landmark on the Homer Spit in Homer, Alaska.
==History==
The Salty Dawg originally was one of the first cabins built in Homer in 1897, soon after the establishment of the town site. It served as the first post office, a railroad station, a grocery store, and a coal mining office for twenty years. In 1909 a second building was constructed, and it served as a school house, post office, grocery store. And at one time, it housed three adults and eleven children.
It was acquired in the late 1940s by Chuck Abbatt to be used as an office for Standard Oil Company. In April 1957, he officially opened it as the Salty Dawg Saloon. By 1960 the Salty Dawg Saloon had a building adjacent to it, coinciding with The Alaska Territory becoming the 49th state of the union in January 1959.
Earl D. Hillstrand (1913-1974), an attorney, small businessman and member of the Alaska House of Representatives, purchased it in 1960. Although an Anchorage resident, Hillstrand had a homestead near Homer and was in the process of developing the nearby Land's End Resort at the time.
After the March 1964 Good Friday earthquake, he moved the structure to its present location. The distinctive lighthouse tower was added to cover a water storage tank, thus completing one of Homer's more historical and recognizable landmarks.
The Salty Dawg Saloon is currently owned and operated by John Warren.
The saloon has been featured on Deadliest Catch on the Discovery Channel. The bar is known for the thousands of dollar bills signed by visitors and tacked to the walls. This practice started many years ago, when a visitor tacked a dollar on the wall, explaining that his friend would be by later. The dollar was intended for buying the friend a drink.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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