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Seville Quarter

2 bytes removed, 18:11, 7 December 2009
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| divisions =
| subsid =
| owner = [[Willmer Wilmer Mitchell]]
| company_slogan =
| homepage = [http://www.rosies.com/ www.rosies.com]
Seville Quarter was founded by [[Bob Snow]], a Dixieland trumpet player and former [[Navy]] pilot. It opened in the former [[Pensacola Cigar and Tobacco Company]] building as "Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse" in August [[1967]].
[[Willmer Wilmer Mitchell]], Snow's lawyer and partner, recounted that "Snow's Dixieland band was gaining a good bit of attention, as was his idea of opening a 'beer and peanuts' saloon in what was then an almost derelict area of Pensacola."<ref name="birthday">"Happy Birthday ROSIE!" ''Pensacola News Journal'', August 10, 2007.</ref> Mitchell helped Snow get the [[Citizens & Peoples Bank]] loan that enabled him to open the nightclub. The first performance was by banjoist Tutti Lockhart playing "Dear One, the World is Waiting for the Sunrise." Snow later joined in to play "The South Rampart Street Parade."<ref name="birthday"/>
In [[1972]], Snow began a similar venture in Orlando called [[Wikipedia:Church Street Station (Orlando)|Church Street Station]], which benefitted greatly from that area's tourism boom. His attentions divided, Snow sold Seville Quarter in [[1984]] to a group of investors who later defaulted on their payments. Despite doing $4 million in business for the year, the complex was forced to close.

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