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This is a list of seating capacities for sports and entertainment arenas in the United States with at least 1,000 seats. The list is composed mostly of arenas that house sports teams (basketball, ice hockey, arena soccer and arena football) and serve as indoor venues for concerts and expositions.
Freedom, NY Active Purchased in 1918, operated as a Boy Scout resident camp until 1988. Mid-1990s, became the main Cub Scout resident camp for the GNF council, and remains so. Camp Seneca: Elmira Council, now Five Rivers Council Hector, NY Closed (since 1989) 1924–1989, was previously a women's camp. Land was sold to Elmira Council in 1924.
Southern Adventures was an amusement park in Huntsville, Alabama. [1] The amusement park had many rides, such as roller coaster named L'il Renegade , bumper cars, kiddie rides, and an arcade. [ 2 ] It also had a water park called Adventure Island Water Park which includes flume slides and kiddie slides.
June 27, 1702: Viscount Cornbury was presented the "Freedom of the City". [287] September 1735: Andrew Hamilton received the "Freedom of the City" for his defence of John Peter Zenger. [288] [self-published source] [self-published source] February 25, 1902: Prince Henry of Prussia was presented the Freedom of the City during a visit to New York ...
May 31 – Huntsville, Alabama; June 1976. June 4 – Knoxville, Tennessee; ... Timeline for the 1975-1976 American Freedom Train, retrieved December 23, 2004.
The metro area's principal city is Huntsville, and consists of two counties: Limestone and Madison. As of the 2020 United States census, the Huntsville Metropolitan Area's population was 491,723, making it the 2nd-largest metropolitan area in Alabama (behind only the Birmingham metropolitan area) and the 113th-largest in the United States. [2]
The Big Spring is a large, underground karst spring. [8] Hearing of the abundant water source and plentiful big game, John Hunt, Huntsville's founder, sought out the spring and settled near it in 1805 on the bluff above, which later became the site of the First National Bank of Huntsville.
Milton Frank Stadium is a 12,000-seat multi-purpose stadium in Huntsville, Alabama.It was used for Alabama A&M football games before the creation of Louis Crews Stadium.It is currently used mainly for Huntsville City Schools high school and middle school football and soccer games and track meets. [1]