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Clover Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Clover, York County, South Carolina. It encompasses 14 contributing buildings in the central business district of Clover. The buildings are predominantly one to three-story masonry commercial buildings built between the mid-1880s and about 1935.
Clover is a town in York County, South Carolina, United States. [2] It is located in the greater Charlotte metropolitan area . [ 5 ] As of 2020 , the population was at 6,671 within the town limits.
A travel management company (TMC) is a travel agency which manages organizations' corporate or business travel programs.Such companies will often provide an end-user online booking tool, mobile application, program management, and consulting teams, executive travel services, meetings and events support, reporting functionality, duty of care, and more.
The area experienced phenomenal growth after the war. In the first United States census (1790), York County had a population of 6,604; 923 were listed as enslaved, with just nine men enslaving 230. Less than 15% of the county's population lived in bondage in 1790, while the state averaged 30%.
105.1 TMC, a radio station in Cebu, Philippines; Taipei Music Center, performing arts and cultural center in Taipei, Taiwan; Thomas & Mack Center, an indoor arena on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas opened in 1983; Traffic Message Channel, a technology for delivering traffic and travel information to drivers
With over 1,000 exhibitors of contract and commercial furnishings, and 50,000 attendees, it is the largest trade show of its kind in North America. [ 42 ] Since 2006 the Merchandise Mart has hosted the Art Chicago international art fair.
SC 557 is a two-lane rural highway that traverses 6.7 miles (10.8 km) from SC 55 near Clover to SC 49/SC 274 in Lake Wylie. The highway provides travelers a more direct route to and from Charlotte . Though it runs physically west-to-east, it is signed as a north-south highway with its western end as its southern terminus and vice versa.
Henry's Knob name derives from the Henry family, early settlers of York County who originally owned the mountain and surrounding land. In 1765 William Henry was granted 336 acres (1.36 km 2) on the south side of the Little Mountain, as Henry's Knob was then called, and four years later he was granted another 100 acres (0.40 km 2).