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Oakwood Historic District is a national historic district located at Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina.It includes work designed by architects Wheeler & Stearn.It encompasses 50 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site (Oakwood Cemetery), and 1 contributing structure in an upscale residential section of Hickory.
Hickory's population in the 2022 United States Census Bureau estimate was 44,084. Hickory is the main city of the Hickory–Lenoir–Morganton Metropolitan Statistical Area, which had a population of 368,347 in the 2022 census, and is included in the larger Charlotte-Concord, NC Combined Statistical Area with a population of 3,387,115 in 2022.
In the early 1940s, Hickory, then a city of c. 15,000 inhabitants, was a leading regional cultural center. Founding Director Paul Whitener felt the city needed a visual arts center. With funding from local industrialist A. Alex Shuford Jr., Whitener organized a committee of citizens in September 1943 to discuss organizing an art association.
When Hickory High School relocated from this site, the remaining building became the Green Park Elementary School, before serving as the Hickory City Schools administration building. The second building that housed what is now Hickory High, was named Claremont Central High School , and was located at 243 3rd Avenue NE Hickory, NC 28601.
3205 34th Street Drive NE. Hickory, North Carolina. 28601. ... St. Stephens High School is a high school located in Hickory, North Carolina, ...
A crane retrieves part of the helicopter from the Potomac River, in the aftermath of the collision of American Eagle flight 5342 and a Black Hawk helicopter that crashed into the river, by the ...
The mall opened August 1978, as the second mall in Hickory, the first being Catawba Mall (was Catawba Furniture Mall. Now a U-Haul storage and rental store). Its two anchors at the time were Belk and Sears. A 1988 expansion relocated J. C. Penney from Catawba Mall to Valley Hills Mall. A food court was located near Sears on the lower level.
On Jan. 17, 2006, the Dallas Cowboys and team owner Jerry Jones lost. They didn’t lose a playoff game; their Bill Parcells-coached team had won just nine games that season and failed to advance ...