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Williamsburg is a small unincorporated community in Greenbrier County, West Virginia, United States. Williamsburg is 10 miles (16 km) west of Falling Spring. Williamsburg has a post office with ZIP code 24991. [2] The community derives its name from Albert Williams, a local pioneer. [3]
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With a capacity of 3,483 (2,377 on the orchestra level and 1,106 on the balcony), the Municipal Auditorium is the largest theater in West Virginia. Concerts, graduations, Broadway stage shows and other special events, including the annual presentation of The Nutcracker, are held on the auditorium's 65-by-85.5-foot stage. [3]
When the original Civic Center opened in November 1958 at the cost of $2.5 million, it consisted of a 6,000-seat arena and the 750-seat "Little Theater." [ 4 ] The complex underwent its first renovation and expansion in 1964 when 2,400 additional seats were added to the arena and a paved parking lot and an ice rink were added to the facilities.
The event is hosted by radio station X103 of Indianapolis [1] and has been held since 1995 at the Klipsch Music Center (previously the Verizon Wireless Music Center and Deer Creek Amphitheater), about 25 miles northeast of downtown Indianapolis in the suburb of Noblesville. Since its inception, the Indianapolis-Noblesville X-Fest has drawn ...
WVU's Evansdale campus around 1970, showing the Engineering Sciences Building, the WVU Coliseum and the Canady Creative Arts Center (left-right).. The WVU Coliseum is a 14,000-seat multi-purpose arena located on the Evansdale campus of West Virginia University in Morgantown, West Virginia.
Busch Campus Center: Lillo Thomas. The Neats April 30, 1985 Madison: Baldwin Gymnasium: The Neats May 2, 1985 Princeton: L.Stockwell Jadwin Gymnasium: Axel Ericson The Neats May 3, 1985 Cambridge: New Athletic Center: The Neats May 4, 1985 Williamstown: Lansing Chapman Rink: May 5, 1985 Buffalo: Alumni Arena: Billy Bragg. The Neats May 7, 1985 ...
On July 12, 2003, the Clay Center for the arts and sciences of West Virginia opened, where the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra would establish its new home. Since 2003, the orchestra has performed its primary concerts in the Clay Center's Maier Foundation Performance Hall, an 1,883-seat theater with exceptional acoustics and sight lines. [4]