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The Florence Center is a 10,000-seat multi-purpose arena in Florence, South Carolina. The arena was known as the Florence Civic Center until it rebranded in November 2017. [6] It hosted the infamous eighth WWE In Your House pay-per-view in 1996, during which a storm knocked out the power and thus the broadcast signal during the event.
Florence Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Florence, Florence County, South Carolina. The district encompasses 24 contributing buildings in the central business district of Florence. The district's buildings were built between about 1890 and 1940.
Florence: 20: Rankin-Harwell House: Rankin-Harwell House: October 9, 1974 : 6 miles northeast of Florence off South Carolina Highway 305: Florence: 21: Red Doe: Red Doe: October 29, 1982 : East of Florence on South Carolina Highway 327
Sep. 23—FLORENCE — The Aiken Municipal Development Commission took a field trip Wednesday to Florence to find out more about the city's redevelopment of its downtown. While there, commission ...
McLeod Regional Medical Center is a 453-bed non-profit medical center located on a 75-acre (300,000 m 2) campus in downtown Florence. The hospital complex in downtown contains the Cardiovascular Institute, the Center for Advanced Surgery, the Cancer Center, and the only specialized pediatrics unit in the northeastern portion of South Carolina.
WWMB (channel 21) is a television station licensed to Florence, South Carolina, United States, serving the Pee Dee and Grand Strand regions of South Carolina as an affiliate of the digital multicast network Dabl.
In 2019, it hosted 90s horror punk band The Independents from Florence, electronic rock band eleventyseven from Laurens, death metal band Through the Eyes of the Dead also from Florence, and Adelitas Way. In 2020, the White Reaper concert on St. Patrick's Day was cancelled due to COVID-19. New Brookland Tavern had no concerts from late March ...
The GSO has grown significantly over the years with two concerts being offered during its first season in 1948 to thirty-three concerts in their 60th year. In 2009, one reviewer for The Greenville News wrote about the Greenville Symphony Orchestra, "it's always a packed house."