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The Barry Robinson Theater and Fine Arts Center opened that same year. In 2019, the school was renamed Catholic High School amid direction that all diocesan institutions, schools and parish buildings must "no longer be named after an individual bishop, pastor, founder or individual".
The Robins Center is a 7,201-seat multi-purpose arena in Richmond, Virginia. Opened in 1972, the arena is home to the University of Richmond Spiders basketball . It hosted the ECAC South (now known as the Colonial Athletic Association ) men's basketball tournament in 1983.
In 1992, WWC opened its Max Robinson Center in Southeast D.C. (2301 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue, SE) and Whitman-Walker Clinic of Southern Maryland (7676 New Hampshire Avenue in Silver Spring). [ 7 ] [ 18 ] [ 19 ] The Lesbian Health Clinic also opened and offered a wide range of gynecological and wellness services to lesbians and bisexual ...
The Robinson Rams softball team plays their home games at Barry Gorodnick field. The Rams have won 8 district titles (1974, 1978, 1986, 1987, 1995, 2004, 2008, and 2015), 3 regional titles (1985, 1986, and 2007), and one state title in 1986.
Name Location County/City Region Summary Banshee Reeks Nature Preserve: Leesburg: Loudoun: Northern: website, 725 acres of successional fields, hardwood forests, wetlands, and riverine habitat; nature center; and over 20 miles of trails; operated by the county, with support from Friends of Banshee Reeks and from Banshee Reeks Chapter of Virginia Master Naturalists
Originally built in the late 1820s by Richmond banker Anthony Robinson Jr. (1792-1861) as a modest one-story summer home, it was expanded in the late 1850s to a two-story mansion for year-round residency by the Robinson family.
As of 2024, there were roughly 1 million fewer workers in construction trades than in 2007, according to the Joint Center for Housing. Even with the backlog of homes that could be built, builders ...
Charles Morrison Robinson (March 3, 1867 – August 20, 1932), most commonly known as Charles M. Robinson, was an American architect. He worked in Altoona and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1889 to 1906 and in Richmond, Virginia from 1906 until the time of his death in 1932.