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As The Charlotte Observer looks back on the stories of the city’s first Black club, Excelsior, we gathered a list of Black-owned hot spots of today.
Gen X and Xennials: Here are 20+ nightclubs, social lounges, live music venues and more where you can party like it’s 1999 in Charlotte.
Charlotte. The Charlotte Athletic Club (1968–1991), merged into the Tower Club [366] The Charlotte City Club (1947) [367] [368] The Tower Club (1984–2004), merged into the Charlotte City Club [369] Durham. The University Club of North Carolina (1987) [370] Gastonia. The City Club of Gastonia (1985–2012), insolvent [371] Greensboro
A Caribbean nightclub with island-themed cocktails will debut by the end of the year north of uptown Charlotte. The Reggae Lounge expects to open in early December at 2630 Statesville Ave.Co ...
In Hispanic neighborhoods such as Eastland in Charlotte, Mexican Americans have become the ethnic majority. Newly formed barrios in the Raleigh area continue a transplanted Latin American culture. In 2005, the Pew Hispanic Center estimated that 300,000 — roughly 65 percent of North Carolina's Latino population — are undocumented immigrants ...
In 1974, Mary T. Harper, Ph.D. (1935-2020), [4] an assistant professor of English at the UNC-Charlotte, proposed an Afro-American cultural center for the city of Charlotte. [4] Working with her mentor, Bertha Maxwell-Roddey, Ph.D., director of UNC-Charlotte's Black Studies Center, Harper envisioned a Charlotte-Mecklenburg Afro-American Cultural ...
My Paid to Party Days started with Mythos, the gay-friendly (it was just gay back then) nightclub on College Street.
The paper regards itself as a leading provider of news and entertainment coverage from a Black perspective. [2]It is a weekly broadsheet that at one time sold for $1 a copy, as well as distributed at no charge at dark green vendor boxes located in Uptown Charlotte and throughout the city primarily in African-American neighborhoods.