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Lexington County Baseball Stadium is a baseball stadium in Lexington, South Carolina. It is the home field of the Lexington County Blowfish of the Coastal Plain League, a collegiate summer baseball league. The stadium holds 2,573 spectators. [1] The venue hosted the Big South Conference baseball tournament from 2016 through 2018. [2]
Lexington, SC community band playing at the Icehouse Amphitheater Slightly north of the town of Lexington rests one of South Carolina's major lakes, Lake Murray . The lake is held by a 1.7-mile-long (2.7 km) dam 5 miles (8 km) north of town, on which people are free to drive, bike, run, or walk.
MapQuest offers online, mobile, business and developer solutions that help people discover and explore where they would like to go, how to get there and what to do along the way and at your destination.
South Carolina Highway 6 Truck (SC 6 Truck) is a 0.770-mile (1.239 km) truck route of SC 6 that has about half of its path within the city limits of Elloree. It begins at an intersection with SC 47 on Felderville Road (S-38-81).
A new discount store has “popped” up Lexington County. Popshelf, a fast-growing chain of stores that offers most items for $5 or less, recently opened a new location at 1776 South Lake Drive ...
The county was chartered in 1785 [3] and was named in commemoration of Lexington, Massachusetts, the site of the Battle of Lexington in the American Revolutionary War. [4] Lexington County is the sixth-most populous county in South Carolina by population and is part of the Columbia , SC Metropolitan Statistical Area .
English: The maps use data from nationalatlas.gov, specifically countyp020.tar.gz on the Raw Data Download page. The maps also use state outline data from statesp020.tar.gz . The Florida maps use hydrogm020.tar.gz to display Lake Okeechobee.
US 301 at the SC 260 intersection in Manning.. US 301 was established in 1932 as a replacement of the piece of US 17-1 north of Wilson and the whole of US 217. Thus US 301 initially ran from US 17 (now US 76) at Pee Dee northeast through Dillon, South Carolina, into North Carolina, and Virginia, ending at U.S. Route 1 in Petersburg, Virginia.