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American rock band Pearl Jam performing live at Club Babyhead, Providence, RI (July 15, 1991). Club Babyhead was a nightclub and hard rock music venue in Providence, Rhode Island. [1] [2] [3] The venue was located at 73 Richmond Street. [4] It was known for being dark and gritty. [5] [6]
Providence—Fall River—Warwick, RI—MA 4 Little Compton: Town Newport County $32,513 $55,368 $62,750 3,593 1,475 Providence—Fall River—Warwick, RI—MA 5 New Shoreham: Town Washington County: $29,188 $44,779 $59,844 1,010 472 6 Cumberland Hill: CDP: Providence County: $28,879 $57,697 $68,361 7,738 3,054 Providence—Fall River—Warwick ...
The Strand Ballroom & Theatre [2] (formerly the Paramount Theatre, Strand Theatre, Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel and commonly The Strand) is a live music venue located in downtown Providence, Rhode Island. The theatre opened in 1915 as a vaudeville theatre and later became a cinema and concert venue.
Silhouettes Gentlemen's Club in Providence has sued city police, alleging that the club has been subjected to over-enforcement of laws and other restrictions because its ownership and clientele is ...
An investigation of the fire by a Rhode Island state grand jury was started by then-Rhode Island Attorney General Patrick Lynch on February 26, 2003. [2] [46] On December 9, 2003, the grand jury announced indictments against Station owners Jeffrey and Michael Derderian and Jack Russell's Great White road manager Daniel M. Biechele. [2]
(62 km 2) Kent County: 003: East Greenwich: 1750: Created from part of Providence County. County of Kent, England 171,278: 168 sq mi (435 km 2) Newport County: 005: Newport: 1703: Formed as Rhode Island County in 1703. Renamed Newport County in 1729: Town of Newport, Essex, England 83,832: 102 sq mi (264 km 2) Providence County: 007: Providence ...
Providence Place is an American shopping mall in Providence, Rhode Island. With 1,400,000 sq ft (130,000 m 2 ) of gross leasable area , it has been the largest shopping mall in Rhode Island since it opened in 1999.
An engraving depicting Exchange Place in 1886. Kennedy Plaza has seen numerous transformations over the 19th and 20th centuries. [3] According to architectural historian William McKenzie Woodword, the site is Providence's "most constantly reworked space, and fully interpreting its history would fill a book that could be a landmark in understanding American urbanism."