I believe Lynn, MA, was well-known for its shoe factories in the early 20th century.
I thinkit might be Lebanon?... Hope that helped... :)
The derivation is from England. The midlands city of Hoddesdon and the town of Huddersfield are likely sources. The Huddlestons were peers and the family state home stand today in Cambridge.
The New York City blackout of 1977 began at about 9:30 in the evening of July 13. Power was restored in Queens and Staten Island early the following afternoon, after about sixteen hours; the entire city was back online by 10:30pm, after twenty-five hours.
There are only 4 active mints today, in Philadelphia, Denver, San Francisco, and West Point. In the past, there were also mints in Carson City and New Orleans.
Chicago
The eschikagon was developed in Chicago. It is a word made up by playing with the letters in the name of the city.
Damascus
.louis , missouri
Jean Baptiste Pooint du Sable.
The Phoenicians, with city-states located in today's Syria, Lebanon and Tunisia.
A Phoenician city-state located in today's Tunisia which was the centre of a great trading empire.
Phoenicia - the Levant. Carthage - today's Tunisia.
By the early 16th century, Venice was the third largest city in the world. The Renaissance blossomed with development of trading with foreign countries. They constructed multiple trading posts and participated in enhancing education. There were major universities with the options to study all topics.
The answer is of course the afro-Phoenicians were the Carthaginians, who were Phoenicians who established their city and trading empire in north Africa (in today's Tunisia).
It was established on a bay on the coast of today's Tunisia by the Phoenician city of Tyre as a trading post in the early 800s BCE, grew into a city and gained independence in the 600s BCE and established its own trading posts in the Western Mediterranean.
In today's Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and in Carthage in Tunisia.