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The Hussey Plow Company Building is a historic industrial building on Dyer Street in North Berwick, Maine. Built in 1831, this small wood-frame building originally housed the offices of the Hussey Plow Company, now known as the Hussey Seating Company , a major manufacturer of bleachers and outdoor seating.
The venue seats 6,400 under the Hussey seating and has lawn space for over 10,000 spectors. [6] A University of Maine study in 2013 showed that the economic impact of the Waterfront Concert series totaled more than $30 million since 2010. [7]
The North Berwick firm fabricated farm implements. It evolved into the Hussey Manufacturing Company, which produced a variety of items including sewer grates, manhole covers, ladders, ski jumps and chair lifts. Today, it is the Hussey Seating Company, a manufacturer of seats for auditoriums, bleachers for stadiums as well as other spectator ...
Teams rarely build their stadiums far beyond the 80,000 seat threshold (and even then, only in the largest markets) because of the league's blackout policy, which prohibited the televising of any NFL game within 75 miles of its home market if a game does not sell all of its non-premium seating. The policy has been suspended since 2015; from ...
Olivia Hussey, the scene-stealing star of the 1968 film "Romeo & Juliet," died at 73 on Dec. 27.. Hussey, who shot to fame as a star in the '60s film and later became an animal rights activist ...
Husky Stadium was a primary venue for the 1990 Goodwill Games, where the crowd saw an address by former President Ronald Reagan, as well as an address by Arnold Schwarzenegger, and a performance by the Moody Blues & Gorky Park. The stadium hosted the opening and closing ceremonies, as well as the track & field competition.
Olivia Hussey Eisley, the British-Argentine actor who shot to fame as a teenager starring as Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli’s 1968 adaptation of “Romeo and Juliet” and went on to star in the ...
A large mural based on a design of Piccadilly Circus by F. Millward Grey, commissioned by Clifford [10] and reproduced by Frank Hussey, [b] adorned the wall above the circle staircase in the lounge foyer, measuring 10 ft (3.0 m) by 9 ft (2.7 m). [9] [12] The cinema, which had cost £26,000 to build, was built by local builder R. J. Nurse, of ...