View allAll Photos Tagged charlottenc
Contact print of a photograph of a portion of downtown Charlotte, N.C., along South Tryon Street [the road intersecting the road in the foreground] during World War I. Pictured is Blake’s Drug Store. Photograph taken while U.S. Army Dr. Philip A. Sheaff was serving at the Camp Greene Base Hospital (undated).
From Philip A. Sheaff Camp Greene Images, WWI 50, WWI Papers, Military Collection, State Archives of North Carolina, Raleigh, N.C.
Charlotte, NC Currently these are all the stores that are still open...but Burlington Coat Factory was closed on March 20 2010 n was the only dept store left. The mall existed since 1975 to 2010. I've to this mall ever since 2000 and they had lost of my fave stores but they closed it like in 2004 to 2008
The EpiCentre in Center City Charlotte is a one-stop, mixed-use labyrinth that’s home to an upscale steakhouse, Irish pub, Italian bistro, movie theatre, dueling piano bar, burger joint, breakfast diner, and so much more. Located at 210 E. Trade Street it’s only a few doors down from Time Warner Cable Arena (formerly Charlotte Bobcats Arena) and a stop on the LYNX light rail line.
Lean more at:
For Charlotte Photography Meetup Groups "Coffee & Strobes #17" we took a field trip to the Levine Museum Of The New South for an after hours Strobe session.
Strobist Info:
SB-28 full power in 28" Wescott Apollo Softbox camera left. Triggered via PWII.
ADM Transportation Co.
41’3” 16.950gal Corn Syrup Tank Car (DOT Class 111A100W1)
UELX 77933
Blt. American Car & Foundry (ACF), 02-04/77 (UELX 77915-78002)
Charlotte, North Carolina
October 10th, 2005
1600 x 1050
I didn't have hiking shoes, but picked these up from Wal-mart. They were the cheapest shoes I could find and thought they would do fine for a 2-3 mile hike. Because of our lack of map reading skills (or because the posted trail map scale was WRONG), I walked 12+ miles in these shoes with one bottle of water and one energy bar.