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Take the time to tour The Parker House and see the many rooms and options you can have with us as our guest. You can read about each room
and decide which would be best for your next group meeting, business or casual/intimate dining experience,or social function. You will see
that The Parker House has the means to meet any of your fine dining needs. We look forward to having and serving you as our guest.
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Beautifully landscaped, the property boasts moonlit old oaks, pecan and willow trees
throughout. Approaching the front of the “home,” you walk through a well-appointed brick courtyard. Upon entering the foyer and turning to
your right, you see what was previously the formal dining room and is now the Executive Dining Room. One large table in this
well-appointed room will seat ten guests for an intimate family dinner or business dinner. The Executive Dining Room is one of three rooms
in the home capable of being closed for private dining. Custom made solid mahogany doors compliment the brick archways you find throughout
the “home.” |
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Adjacent to The Blue Room you find The Allegra Room. This room is appropriately named for
co-owner Steve Parker’s late maternal grandmother Maggie Allegra Welch. Being the largest room in an area that once was two bedrooms and a
bath, The Allegra will accommodate up to 40 guests and also has audio visual and private dining capabilities. |
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Moving on to the north end of the home, you walk past antique buffets and sideboards into
The Blue Room, previously the master bedroom suite. In this room, as with other areas of the home, beautiful pieces of art adorn the walls
including spectacular tapestries, paintings by Thomas Kincaid – “The Painter of Light,” Mark Millet – a local artist, and sculptures by
DeBusk. The Blue Room will seat up to twenty-four guests with private dining and audiovisual capabilities. |
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Looking back to the center of the restaurant and through another archway you find the
central fireplace and beautiful chandelier in the Adcock Room. A portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Adcock adorns the wall in what was previously
used as the den or family room. |
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The pool, with its three-tiered Italian marble fountain centerpiece, offers a “New
Orleans” atmosphere for poolside dining. Twenty-year-old Wax Myrtle trees surround the pool which is accented with other landscaping, soft
lighting and music. |
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Moving back into the center of the restaurant, we move into the Piano Bar. This area,
which was the sunroom, overlooks a beautiful poolside courtyard. |
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