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The Robert C. Byrd Bridge is a 720-foot (220 m) continuous truss bridge that crosses the Ohio River between Huntington, West Virginia and Chesapeake, Ohio.The crossing was constructed to replace an old, narrow, two-lane structure that was demolished after 69 years of service in a spectacular implosion on July 17, 1995.
FirstMerit Corporation was a diversified financial services company headquartered in Akron, Ohio, with assets of approximately $26.2 billion as of June 30, 2016, and 359 banking offices and 400 ATM locations in Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois and Pennsylvania.
DriveTime is a private company headquartered in Tempe, Arizona. [3] The company's business model is focused on selling previously owned vehicles to car-buyers. [4] It uses a proprietary credit scoring model to finance car purchases at its dealerships in-house, [5] [6] including subprime lending.
Accepted payment methods. Credit or debit cards. American Express; Visa (credit or debit) Discover (credit or debit) MasterCard (credit or debit) PayPal (for most online purchases) Direct debit is no longer available for active accounts, however, it can be used to pay past due balances, with a $7 fee. Entering your payment info
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Huntington is the setting of the long-running comic strip The Lockhorns. Huntington is the basis for the television series The Wonder Years. Huntington is the town in which the American sitcom Growing Pains supposedly takes place. [29] However, Robin Hood Lane, the street address of the Seaver family's home, is fictional. [30]
Huntington built its first five-story building in 1878, on the intersection's southwest corner. Four of P. W.'s five sons became partners during the 1890s and early 1900s. The bank was incorporated in 1905 as The Huntington National Bank of Columbus. [11] Huntington died in 1918 shortly after turning the bank over to his sons. [12]
Huntington Bank Tower was initially proposed in 2018 to replace a 10-story building and a surface parking lot. [1] The development was planned to be the headquarters of Midland-based Chemical Bank, [2] but the bank was involved in a series of mergers that led to the new entity, Huntington National Bank, establishing a headquarters in the building. [3]