As I have said in the past Pensacola is an incredibly historic city. Though people are quick to think of the beaches or military instalations, one place almost always gets forgot and that is of the tremendous culture Pensacola has either produced or helped nurture from the ever changing iconography of the Graffiti Bridge to the glitzy Sanger Theatre. However, one place remains forgot in this list and that is of the once thriving Belmont-Devilliers district just a bit northwest of downtown Pensacola. During its hay day the Belmont-Devilliers had numerous clubs in some cases mirroring the Harlem renaisance of the early 20th century (early 1900s).
Now I hate to cut the music but theres some caching to be done.
N30 AA. 0BB W87 CC.DDD
# of sisters related to the eating establishment found at the SE corner of the intersection of Belmont and Devillier times itself= AA
Looking at the historical marker stage you will find a picture of a poster headlining James Carr at Abes 506 club look at the month and day of the event and turn it into numbers (ex. Dec. 5 will be 12-5) then turn the hyphen into a '+' and add them to get BB.
I'll give you some smooth Jazz for CC= the number of letters in entertainment.
Looking at the top of the east side of the same historic marker you'll find a purple record slightly larger than a DVD, look below WALLY MERCER and you'll find a number, add 63 to that number to get DDD.
I left a few items of swag at the final and PLEASE recover it after replacing the container.