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Allandale 90’s Craft Night & Trivia
Allandale Mansion hosting 90’s Craft Night & Trivia
Allandale Mansion is hosting a special 90s Craft Night and Trivia event next month. The event promises to be all that and a bag of chips. So, what’s the 411?
The event will take place from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. on September 10 at Allandale Mansion. Come out and enjoy some 90’s trivia while you spark your creativity by making fuse bead creations, friendship bracelets and shrinky dinks.
You can also just pick up some coloring pages and enjoy the company. Supplies will be included, and staff will be on hand to help you with the hot parts of this craft.
Tickets are $10 per person and registration is required. To register, please visit https://bit.ly/4dfEeBL. You can also register by clicking on the CivicRec link in the Connect Kingsport app or go to www.kingsporttn.gov and click on “CivicRec,” then search for “craft night” in the search bar.
For information about other programs, activities and classes offered by the Kingsport Parks and Recreation Department, visit www.kingsportparksandrecreation.org or call 423-229-9460.
About Allandale Mansion
Allandale Mansion was built in the early 1950s and donated to the City of Kingsport in 1969 after the death of its owner, Harvey Brooks. The property includes the mansion, two barns, a picnic pavilion, two man-made ponds, the Heron Dome and a 2,000-square-foot amphitheater. For more information visit www.allandalemansion.com.
About the City of Kingsport
Founded in 1917, the City of Kingsport (pop. 55,400) is located on the Tennessee-Virginia border at the crossroads of I-81 and I-26 near the geographic center of the eastern United States. The city is widely known as a planned community, designed by renowned city planner John Nolen and wrapping around the foot of Bays Mountain – a 3,750-acre park, nature preserve, planetarium and observatory. Kingsport is recognized as an International Safe Community by the National Safety Council, a Healthier Tennessee community, and won the 2009 Harvard Innovations in American Government Award for its higher education initiatives. While many city names are duplicated throughout the U.S., there’s only one Kingsport – a fact that invokes community pride, known locally as the “Kingsport Spirit.” For more information, please visit www.kingsporttn.gov.