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My wife and I are big fans of Dublin Village Tavern and Liberty Tavern in Powell (same owner). We actually live closer to Liberty Tavern, so that's where we went for lunch on Saturday with family in town. They gave all the women and girls red carnations for Valentine's Day. If you ever go to Liberty Tavern, I highly recommend the salmon club, which comes on a pretzel bun. Who knew bacon and salmon worked together on a sandwich?

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We went to Liberty Tavern in Powell this evening and it's a real nice place for young people, old people, people on dates, parties, and even families with toddlers. Great place to take out of towners, too. You can all walk to Rita's after for ices or custard.

The salads at Liberty Tavern are very good. I couldn't stop eating my daughter's chicken fingers and chips (kids meal) -- super yummy. Before dinner, we had a nice time at the playground near the little Powell branch of the Delaware County public library. This has become a family tradition -- time at the playground, Liberty Tavern, & Rita's.

There was a slight snafu in the kitchen with my meal so the chef said he'd cover the cost. Very unexpected and great P.R. for the place. We will return again and again.

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    Dublin history lesson

    Peter and Benjamin Sells came to the area around 1801 from Huntington County, Pa., to buy land. Old Dublin was first platted in 1810 by their brother, John. Surveyor John Shields named the town after his birthplace in Ireland. The town developed the usual assortment of mills, shops and churches, with settlers coexisting peacefully with Wyandot Indians, who camped on Indian Run. The town gained notoriety in the mid-19th century, when a surplus of taverns and rowdy Civil War veterans gave the village a tough reputation. Columbus' growth and the construction of I-270 made expansion inevitable. Dublin achieved city status in 1987.
    Source: Columbus Dispatch library research

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