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Oneida Cotton Mills and Scott-Mebane Manufacturing Company Complex

1882 establishments in North CarolinaAlamance County, North Carolina Registered Historic Place stubsIndustrial buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in North CarolinaIndustrial buildings completed in 1882National Register of Historic Places in Alamance County, North Carolina
Textile mills in North Carolina

The Oneida Cotton Mills and Scott-Mebane Manufacturing Company Complex, also known as the Scott and Donnell Mill, is a historic hosiery mill building in Graham, Alamance County, North Carolina. It consists of four contributing buildings and one contributing structure. The buildings date from 1882 into the 1940s; all are red-brick except for a small shed-roofed bathroom building from the 1940s. The complex includes the Scott and Donnell Mill (1882, c. 1959), a smokestack (1882), Holt Mill (c. 1898; c. 1959), Scott-Mebane Manufacturing Company (c. 1900; c. 1906; c. 1959), and opener Room (c. 1931).It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Oneida Cotton Mills and Scott-Mebane Manufacturing Company Complex (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Oneida Cotton Mills and Scott-Mebane Manufacturing Company Complex
West Harden Street,

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N 36.070555555556 ° E -79.404166666667 °
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West Harden Street 272
27253
North Carolina, United States
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Burlington Athletic Stadium

Burlington Athletic Stadium is a baseball stadium in Burlington, North Carolina. It seats 3,500 and serves as the home field for the Burlington Sock Puppets of the Appalachian League. The Sock Puppets were previously known as the Burlington Royals (2007–2020) and Burlington Indians (1986–2006) when the Appalachian League was a rookie league affiliated with Minor League Baseball prior to Major League Baseball's 2020 reorganization of the minor leagues. Originally built in Danville, Virginia and known as League Park, the stadium was purchased in 1958 for $5,000 after the Danville Leafs folded. After being dismantled in Danville, it was hauled to its present location and rebuilt. It reopened for play in 1960. At that point, the team left their previous home at Graham Athletic Park, which is now used by Graham Middle School.The ballpark was known historically as Fairchild Stadium, after the adjacent Fairchild Park and nearby World War II Fairchild Aircraft manufacturing plant. It played host to many games in the original Carolina League, and appears in Ron Shelton's 1988 film, "Bull Durham." Burlington Athletic Stadium is also known to have played host to many Major League Baseball stars beginning their careers. Notable former Burlington Indians include CC Sabathia, Bartolo Colón, and Manny Ramírez. 2018 Baseball Hall of Fame inductee Jim Thome also began his career in Burlington. Historic greats who once made Fairchild Stadium their home field include another Red Sox legend, Luis Tiant, and longtime New York Yankees pitcher and coach Mel Stottlemyre. Former Burlington Royals who played at Burlington Athletic Stadium include Nicky Lopez, Salvador Pérez, and Wil Myers. The park was also the site of the longest continuous single-game broadcast in baseball history. The 27-inning marathon between the Burlington Indians and Bluefield Orioles lasted eight hours and fifteen minutes, and occurred over two days on June 24–25, 1988. Indians' announcer Richard Musterer called the entire game for WBBB-AM.