Cottage Kitchen Lunch Returns Friday With New Roof To Start New Year

The Guild Committee thanks its 1800+ luncheon customers who enjoyed the quaint atmosphere of the little house on the corner last year and supported the historic preservation efforts of the Heritage Association. See you at lunch!

Staff Report

The Cottage Kitchen at the Charles S. Cock House Museum, located at 400 E. Hopkins Street, will be serving lunch from 11 AM until 1 PM on Friday, January 10.

Friday’s lunch will be hosted by The Heritage Association Board of Directors is serving Chicken Sausage Gumbo, Rice, Salad, and Cornbread. Lunch will also be served with your choice of tea, coffee or water and all for only $8 (only cash or checks accepted)!

All proceeds from the lunch will benefit the Heritage Association of San Marcos, an organization that supports the preservation of historic buildings and celebrates the culture and traditions that beautify and enrich the San Marcos community.

Cottage Kitchen began more than 40 years ago inside the Charles S. Cock home, a historic stone house that is now listed in the National Register. Charles S. Cock was a pioneer and a former mayor of San Marcos. For more information please call 512-392-4295.

Volunteers are the backbone of nonprofit organizations and their survival would be extremely difficult without them. If would like additional information to become a volunteer, click HERE.

The Heritage Association of San Marcos is a nonprofit organization chartered in 1975 to support the preservation of buildings, historical sites and archives as well as to perpetuate traditions that beautify and enrich the community life of this city.

The Association grew out of the San Marcos Bicentennial Commission, which was formed in 1972 to plan and coordinate the city’s celebration of the nation’s Bicentennial in 1976.

Since its founding, the Heritage Association has been responsible for many beloved community traditions, including the traditional Friday luncheons at the Cottage Kitchen.

View Comments

  • The Heritage Assoc got screwed by the roofers, who being illegals, demonstrated complete ignorance of rules controlling cedar shake application. Some of the shakes have already began to buckle upward as a result of being too tightly spaced. More, you cannot have spaces in the next two adjacent rows of shakes immediately above any lower rows, yet they did.

    My qualifications? Fifty years in the construction industry, my first contract was a large apartment complex in San Antonio, still standing, cedar shingle walls and roofs.

    But on the positive side, the new roof sure does look good to a novice.

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