self supporting TV towers
Ted Larsen
tlmedia@triad.rr.com
Fri Oct 2 12:18:13 EDT 2009
Once during an interview Flatley told me his iconic Tudor architecture.was a
tribute to his native Ireland. Flatley's original trade was a simple
bricklayer.
Not much on Wikipedia, but what's there is a bit eye-opening with
interesting annotations.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Flatley
TL
.
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Francini" <francini@mac.com>
To: "A. Joseph Ross" <joe@attorneyross.com>
Cc: <boston-radio-interest@bostonradio.org>; "Eli Polonsky"
<elipolo@earthlink.net>
Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 11:47 AM
Subject: Re: self supporting TV towers
> They were indeed Flatley properties; if I recall correctly the full list
> included Braintree, Newton, Framingham, Danvers, and Nashua. They also
> had apartment complexes scattered around the same areas, with the same
> Tudor look. Tom Flatley must have really liked the style...
>
> j
>
> On 29 Sep 2009, at 0:11, A. Joseph Ross wrote:
>
>> On 28 Sep 2009 at 17:24, Eli Polonsky wrote:
>>
>>> Unlike the Sheraton Hotels in Newton and Framingham, the
>>> Needham Sheraton was never a "Sheraton-Tara", only just a
>>> Sheraton. I don't know what qualified those other Sheratons
>>> to gain the "Tara" suffix that the Needham one lacked.
>>
>> I believe the Tara hotels were Flatley franchises, and I think they
>> all had the same sort of Tudor architecture.
>>
>> --
>> A. Joseph Ross, J.D. 617.367.0468
>> 92 State Street, Suite 700 Fax 617.507.7856
>> Boston, MA 02109-2004 http://www.attorneyross.com
>>
>>
>
>
>
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