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The station first signed on the air on October 29, 1972. It is the oldest independent station in the state of South Carolina, and was also the first new commercial station to sign on in the Greenville–Spartanburg–Asheville market since CBS affiliate WSPA-TV (channel 7) signed on in April 1956. Carolina Christian Broadcasting has owned the ...
Greenville: The History of the City and County in the South Carolina Piedmont (1995) Moore, John Hammond. Columbia and Richland County: A South Carolina Community, 1740–1990 (1993) Pease, William H. and Jane H. Pease. The Web of Progress: Private Values and Public Styles in Boston and Charleston, 18T28–1843 (1985),* Rose, Willie Lee.
Greenville County (/ ˈ ɡ r iː n v ɪ l / GREEN-vil; locally / ˈ ɡ r iː n v əl / GREEN-vəl) is located in the U.S. state of South Carolina. As of the 2020 census , the population was 525,534, [ 1 ] making it the most populous county in the state.
It cited engineering data that showed the Paris Mountain site served hundreds of thousands fewer people and called Spartan's "misrepresentation" as to whether it would permanently operate from there "calculated". It also agreed with a previously rejected claim that the stronger signal in Greenville made WSPA-TV, in effect, a Greenville station.
Knox Haynsworth White [1] (born January 26, 1954) is an American politician who has served as the 34th mayor of Greenville, South Carolina, since 1995. He has been elected to eight four-year terms as mayor and is the longest-serving mayor in the city's history. Greenville is the seat of Greenville County and the state's sixth most populous city.
Edgefield is located slightly east of the center of Edgefield County at (33.7868, -81.9278 U.S. Route 25 passes through the southwest part of the town, bypassing the center, and leads north 33 miles (53 km) to Greenwood and south 26 miles (42 km) to Augusta, Georgia.
On September 3, 1960, he opened the first Hardee's location in Greenville, NC. [2] Hardee died in his home town of Greenville, North Carolina, on June 20, 2008, and was cremated two days later. [1] [2] His cremains are inurned in Greenville at Pinewood Memorial Park in the Floral Garden 4 Section. [3]
Lay was born in Charlotte, North Carolina on March 6, 1909. [1] [2] His father, Jesse N. Lay, worked for International Harvester, first as a bookkeeper in Charlotte and later as a commercial salesman in Columbia, South Carolina, where the family moved. [1]