Blue Roan Bar and Grill

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This article is missing substantial content. Please avoid speculation while we work to revise this page with more information.

This page contains speculative content. Some information is based on theories & reconstructions from the Rotborough Truth Foundation, and do not have citations.

Blue Roan Bar & Grill
Company Information
Name Blue Roan Bar & Grill
Founded 2002
Headquarters Rotborough, MO
Founder Unknown
Industry Restaurant, entertainment venue.
Website view archive
Status Inactive
Known for Disappearance of Luke LaChance

Blue Roan Bar & Grill was a bar and restaurant in Rotborough, Missouri, which also functioned as a live music venue. The establishment was locally known as “the bar with a giant horse on top” due to the large horse statue mounted on its roof.

History

The bar first opened its doors in 2002. For several years it operated quietly, attracting little public attention outside of serving as a regular venue for performances by the band Tezticular Torzion, with the website advertising an apparent constant rotation of live performers. The disappearance of Luke LaChance later brought the establishment into local focus, tying it to the broader mystery surrounding his case as it was the last place Luke was seen when he was alive.

Due to the absence of surviving physical records, most information about Blue Roan Bar & Grill has been reconstructed through archived versions of its website preserved by the Rotborough Time Machine. The bar has since become a minor point of interest within Rotborough folklore.

Staff and Patrons

Little documentation exists regarding the ownership of Blue Roan. Surviving police records from the disappearance case of Luke LaChance briefly mention Sebastian Vonora being employed as a bartender at Blue Roan, though this is confusing given that Vonora was operating his own business, Curtain Call Blinds and Shades, at this time.

Recovered reviews from MyDigitalRot forums of the establish mention hostile staff and irregular business hours, with multiple users reporting they had been pressured to leave the establishment shortly after entering. Other users questioned how the establishment stayed in business with exceptionally low turnout.

See More

CASE 002: Luke Lachance (2004) [collapse/expand]
People: Evidence: Outcomes:

 •Luke LaChance  •Gray Jones  •Sebastian Vonora

 •test  •test1

 •The Failure of RSRP  •Suicide of Michelle LaChance

CASE 002: Luke Lachance (2004) [collapse/expand]
People: Evidence: Outcomes:

 •Luke LaChance  •Gray Jones  •Sebastian Vonora

 •test  •test1

 •The Failure of RSRP  •Suicide of Michelle LaChance