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| 1926—1936 The building which was to become
the Townhouse was built by Emeryville fireman Frank Mesnickow in 1926 1936—1977 Blackie presumably took it on the lam in 1936 and Joe
Vernetti rented Frank's property. Vernetti's
Townhouse In the 1940's,
Joe added a restaurant to his bar and formed a dining club called the
East Bay Society of Gentleman Chefs. The Chefs' main contribution
to the culinary arts of Emeryville consisted of wearing chef
hats while not cooking. In addition to his valued regulars, some of
Joe's
more
notable
guests included jockey Willy Shoemaker, movie stars Betty Grable and Tony Curtis, and bandleader Harry James
. 1977 —1982 After 41 years, Joe Vernetti retired
to Silverado and sold the Townhouse to developers Tom Wenaas and Jim Carnitato. They
expanded on the Western theme, adding yet more wagon wheels, snake
skins, moose heads and eventually, live country and western
music featuring big name bands 1982— After
being closed for a year, due to the exigencies of an unrelated legal
matter, the Townhouse was sold to to
Bob McManus, an 1989 No
way. The Townhouse was sold to Chef Ellen Hope Rosenberg and
French restaurateur Joseph LeBrun 2002 After 12 years in business together, Ellen became sole proprietor of the restaurant. Things began to change. The outdoor patio was remodeled, the gravel parking lot was paved, scrumptious new dishes made their way onto the menu and the web site launched. But there are always fresh flowers on the end of the bar and history continues to be made here every night. For Ellen's bio click here. There's lots more to the story of the Townhouse. To read or download a PDF file with the real dope from the Emeryville Historical Society click here . If you need copy of the Adobe Acrobat Reader click on the icon below.
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