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Cincinnati Wings Hockey
After the Central Hockey League (CHL) version of the Stingers folded 33 games into the 1979/80 season, Cincinnati was left without a pro hockey team for the first time since 1974, when the American Hockey League's Swords folded. The Tigers hit the ice in... -
Cincinnati Wings Pro Hockey
Most Queen City hockey fans know of the Mohawks, Swords, Stingers, and Might Ducks.?? However, another hockey team played in Cincinnati, albeit for just one season. IN 1963, the Indianapolis Capitols of the Central Professional Hockey League relocated to The Cincinnati Gardens after their... -
Cincy Trick or Treat Doodle
Draw up?? a little fun this Halloween! -
Cinderella City Shopping Center
Cinderella City opened in 1968 in Englewood. It was once the largest mall west of the Mississippi. It closed in 1997 and was demolished in 1999. -
Circle City
Are you a proud native of the Circle City? Show your pride in Indianapolis with this stylish T-shirt. -
Circle City, Indiana
The Circle City nickname for Indianapolis comes from the original layout of the community by surveyor Alexander Ralson who designed the town around a traffic circle. -
Circus World
Circus World was a theme park in Haines City, FL that opened in 1974. Originally owned by Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey, it was intended to be the winter home of that company's circus operations as well as the site of its training... -
CISL Logo T-shirt
The Continental Indoor Soccer League (CISL) was established in 1993. It's primary purpose was to fill indoor arena's with dates during the off-peak summer months, As such, most of the clubs were owned by groups that also owned NBA and NHL teams. The league... -
Civic Arena "The Big Igloo"
Home to hockey's Penguins from 1967 to 2010, the Civic Arena was nicknamed "The Igloo." It was also home to the ABA's??Pipers??and??Condors??in the late '60s and early '70s, as well as the indoor soccer??Spirit??in the '80s and the??Gladiators??of the Arena Football League. The Penguins... -
CKLW Big 30 Hits List Logo T-Shirt
Each week, starting in the late '60s and going through the '70s, listeners to Detroit's CKLW, many as far away as Cleveland, anxiously awaited to see where their favorite songs ranked on the station's Big 30 countdown. -
CKLW The Big 8
CKLW, 800 on the AM dial, "the Big 8," was one of Detroit's most iconic rock & roll radio stations in the '60s and '70s, even though its studios and transmitter were located across the Detroit River in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. The station's weekly... -
Clanging Monkey
Wanna play? Â Â OS17308 -
Clark Griswold Nipply Ugly Christmas Sweatshirt
It is a bit NIPPLY, isn't it? -
Clawford Chicago Cougars Mascot
The Chicago Cougars were members of the World Hockey Association from 1972 to 1975. They played their home games at the now demolished International Amphitheater on the South Side. Their mascot was a giant cartoon cougar called Clawford. -
CLE Baseball
No matter what the team is officially called, it's still our team. Celebrate baseball in CLE in this great design from Old School Shirts! -
Cleveland 216 Area Code
One of the first area codes issued under the North American Numbering Plan in 1947, the 216 area code once covered all of Northeast Ohio. In the mid 1990s, the 330 and 440 area codes were introduced to handle the demand for telephone numbers. -
Cleveland 216 Area Code - Youth Sizes
The 216 stand up and represent! -
Cleveland Barons
Remember Cleveland's only NHL team? The Barons began as the Oakland Seals in 1967, later becoming the California Golden Seals. In 1976, the team moved to Cleveland and took the name of the city's old beloved American Hockey League team, the Barons. They played... -
Cleveland Barons 2001-2006
After the Cleveland Lumberjacks folded in 2001, along with the entire International Hockey League (IHL) in 2001, the city welcomed the third incarnation of the Barons. The new team was an American Hockey League (AHL) team relocated from Lexington where they were known as... -
Cleveland Barons Head
This shirt features the main logo of the Cleveland Barons, who played in the American Hockey League and called the city home from 1937 until 1973.

