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S.C. District #5 - Rep. Thomas S. Gettys Theme 5. Political and Military k( NATIONAL HISTORIC Affairs LANDMARKS) Form 10-300 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STATE: (July 1969) NATIONAL PARK SERVICE S()uth Carolina COUNTY: NATIONAL REG ISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Sljmter INVENTOR Y - NOMINATION FORM FOR NPS USE ONLY ENT RY NUMBER DATE (Type all entries — complete applicable sections) *j // /.f$~t £o(&£/ U htf r~ ^iiiiiiiii^mimmimmmmi lllllilllililll^liiii^h COMMON: X^' Milford Plantation SM^X AND/OR HISTORIC: Y X/\ Sill ;:'x':':'*: '^^^SS^ii^^^^f: STREET AND NUMBER: 5t ts Nnr yi^/ *•* W CITY OR TOWN: P Pinewood V x 29125 V^vi^^^: STATE CODE COUNTY: ^^ lf)]\ \ \ O ^' CODE South Carolina 29 215 45 Sumter —— l- 085 |i|lil^|sp:jiili{ii::s- ;£'• :& iif CATEGORY TATUS ACCESSIBLE OWNERSHIP S (Check One) TO THE PUBLIC G District (X] Building Q Public Public Acquisition: CT] Qcc upied Yes: . , G Restricted G Site G Structure S Private G '" Process (— j UnQ ccupied | | Both G Being Considered r —i p res . G Unrestricted Q Object ervation work — i n progress ® No t PRESENT USE (Check One or More as Appropriate) 1 1 Agriculturol [ | Government ( | Park G Tronsp ortation G Comments G Commercial Q Industrial [X] Private Residence G Other fk Soecitv) G Educational I 1 Military | | Relig ous G Entertainment I 1 Museum G Scientific OWNER'S NAME: Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Reeve Clark STREET AND NUMBER: Milford Plantation CITY OR TOWN: STATE: CODE Pinewood 2912<5 South Carolina 45 iff ,/::, ; <>!^^^&m&:, ^%P %J£t COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS, ETC: Sumter County Court House COUNTY: STREET AND NUMBER: Main Street CITY OR TOWN: STATE CODE Sumter South Carolina 45 29150 jlliilllllllllllilp;;.;^::;!:!)!! JN6 lilv E Y «i |:::,; . -
Unali'yi Lodge
Unali’Yi Lodge 236 Table of Contents Letter for Our Lodge Chief ................................................................................................................................................. 7 Letter from the Editor ......................................................................................................................................................... 8 Local Parks and Camping ...................................................................................................................................... 9 James Island County Park ............................................................................................................................................... 10 Palmetto Island County Park ......................................................................................................................................... 12 Wannamaker County Park ............................................................................................................................................. 13 South Carolina State Parks ................................................................................................................................. 14 Aiken State Park ................................................................................................................................................................. 15 Andrew Jackson State Park ........................................................................................................................................... -
Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Archaeology and Anthropology, South Carolina Faculty & Staff Publications Institute of 9-2020 Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site Stacey L. Young Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/sciaa_staffpub Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site By Stacey L. Young, Director, SCIAA Applied Research Division The South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Applied Research Division (SCIAA-ARD) recently completed a Phase I archaeological survey of Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site located along the Tyger River in Union County, South Carolina. The work was performed on behalf of SC Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism (SCPRT) to assist park staff with management of the property and site interpretation. Rose Hill is an early 19th to mid-20th-century plantation site that was home to William Henry Gist, his family, and families of enslaved laborers, sharecroppers, and tenant farmers, until it was sold in 1939 to the US Forest Service (USFS). The site now operates as a State Historic Site operated by SCPRT. Rose Hill was listed in the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1970 for its association with William Henry Gist, his prominence in politics, and the architecture of the house. Figure 3: 1933 aerial image showing tenant house locations, fields, and Gist house. (Photo by SCIAA-ARD) William Henry Gist (1807-1874), Cotton and corn were grown on the perhaps mostly known for his secessionist plantation that was maintained by a views, served various positions in the population of about 200 enslaved laborers. -
The Early Life of CHARLOTTE AUGUSTA EDINGS
1 The early life of CHARLOTTE AUGUSTA EDINGS (13 October 1860 31 December 1962) William Mayne NEILL = Susan Mary ABBOTT (1824-1913) (1830-1921) Charlotte Edings was born on the remote sea island of St Helena, off the coast of Harold Henry = Louisa Buchanan HOLTON Charlotte Augusta EDINGS South Carolina. Both her parents came from (1859-1945) (1864-1942) (1860-1962) established slave-owning planter families. Eileen Buchanan Njal = Alfred John MICHELL-CLARKE Rolf Mayne When she was one year old, she would have (1892-1942) (1895-1980) (1898-1917) heard the crashing sounds of gunfire from Fiona Louise Neill = James POWELL the Union ships as they fired upon (1920-2007) (1916-2007) Confederate forts in the Battle of Port Royal, early in the American Civil War. Within a Katherine Maynard SAYCE = James Michael Neill = Lisa BELLAMY (1949- (1949- (1954- (1961- day or two, all the white planters and their families had fled the island. Thomas Powell BELLAMY Laurie Bellamy POWELL (1992- (1997- In 1867, when she was 6 and for no clear reason, Charlotte was sent to England to live with William and Susan Neill, a radical couple with strong anti-slavery sentiments. She studied at the Slade School of Art in London. She married Lewis Beard, scion of a distinguished Lancashire radical family. Lewis became Town Clerk of Blackburn, 1 He died in 1933. Charlotte, by then Lady Beard, survived him by 29 years, dying in Grange-over-Sands, Cumbria, in 1962, aged 102. The mystery of Charlotte Charlotte was my great-great aunt. She was alive until I was 13, when she was the only surviving Neill (although perhaps not by birth) apart from my mother. -
Look to the Governors— Federalism Still Lives by Karlyn H
Chapter 4 Table 1: House Vote, By Income Group 1994 1996 1998 D R D R D R Less than $15,000 60% 37% 61% 36% 57% 39% $15,000-$30,000 50 48 54 43 53 44 $30,000-$50,000 44 54 49 49 48 49 $50,000-$75,000 45 54 47 52 44 54 $75,000+ 38 61 39 59 45 52 Source: Surveys by Voter News Service. tion, health care, Social Security. The effect was predictable: or more is growing rapidly and can’t be taken for granted a significant shift in support from Republican candidates to anymore. The GOP must decide what issues will allow it to Democratic ones. That result creates a dilemma for the GOP hold onto the gains made among non-affluent voters while not as it looks ahead to the next House elections. On the one hand, losing any more ground with the affluent. whatever the causes for the GOP’s loss of support among the affluent, those same causes apparently helped Republicans The extent to which the Republicans are successful, and gain enough ground with non-affluent voters to hold onto a the extent to which the Democrats can thwart their strategy, House majority. But the voter bloc of those making $75,000 could determine who controls the House in 2000. Look to the Governors— Federalism Still Lives By Karlyn H. Bowman In his 1988 book, Laboratories of Democracy, political Eight of the country’s ten most populous states have Republi- writer David Osborne urged readers to look beyond Washing- can governors. -
Coastal Zone Region / Overview
SECTION 9 COASTAL ZONE REGION / OVERVIEW Index Map to Study Sites 2A Table Rock (Mountains) 5B Santee Cooper Project (Engineering & Canals) 2B Lake Jocassee Region (Energy Production) 6A Congaree Swamp (Pristine Forest) 3A Forty Acre Rock (Granite Outcropping) 7A Lake Marion (Limestone Outcropping) 3B Silverstreet (Agriculture) 8A Woods Bay (Preserved Carolina Bay) 3C Kings Mountain (Historical Battleground) 9A Charleston (Historic Port) 4A Columbia (Metropolitan Area) 9B Myrtle Beach (Tourist Area) 4B Graniteville (Mining Area) 9C The ACE Basin (Wildlife & Sea Island Culture) 4C Sugarloaf Mountain (Wildlife Refuge) 10A Winyah Bay (Rice Culture) 5A Savannah River Site (Habitat Restoration) 10B North Inlet (Hurricanes) TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR SECTION 9 COASTAL ZONE REGION / OVERVIEW - Index Map to Coastal Zone Overview Study Sites - Table of Contents for Section 9 - Power Thinking Activity - "Turtle Trot" - Performance Objectives - Background Information - Description of Landforms, Drainage Patterns, and Geologic Processes p. 9-2 . - Characteristic Landforms of the Coastal Zone p. 9-2 . - Geographic Features of Special Interest p. 9-3 . - Carolina Grand Strand p. 9-3 . - Santee Delta p. 9-4 . - Sea Islands - Influence of Topography on Historical Events and Cultural Trends p. 9-5 . - Coastal Zone Attracts Settlers p. 9-5 . - Native American Coastal Cultures p. 9-5 . - Early Spanish Settlements p. 9-5 . - Establishment of Santa Elena p. 9-6 . - Charles Towne: First British Settlement p. 9-6 . - Eliza Lucas Pinckney Introduces Indigo p. 9-7 . - figure 9-1 - "Map of Colonial Agriculture" p. 9-8 . - Pirates: A Coastal Zone Legacy p. 9-9 . - Charleston Under Siege During the Civil War p. 9-9 . - The Battle of Port Royal Sound p. -
American Revolution & Constitution 1770-1785
TRAVELING THROUGH SOUTH CAROLINA HISTORY THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AND CONSTITUTION (C. 17701770----1785)1785) South Carolina played a significant role in the American Revolution and the development of the United States as a nation. Our state has several battlefields related to the Revolution and historic sites associated with early American leaders. Andrew Jackson State Park Heyward Washington House Lancaster Charleston 803-285-3344 843-722-2996 http://www.southcarolinaparks.com/andrewjackson/ http://www.charlestonmuseum.org/heyward-washington-house Charles Pinckney National Historic Site Kings Mountain National Military Park Mount Pleasant Highway 216 near Blacksburg 843-881-5516 864-936-7921 http://www.nps.gov/chpi/index.htm http://www.nps.gov/kimo/index.htm Cowpens National Battlefield Old Exchange and Provost Dungeon Gaffney Charleston 864-461-7795 843-727-2165 http://www.nps.gov/cowp/index.htm http://oldexchange.org/ Drayton Hall Musgrove Mill State Historic Site Charleston Clinton 843-769-2600 864-938-0100 http://draytonhall.org/ http://www.southcarolinaparks.com/musgrovemill Fort Moultrie National Monument Ninety Six National Historic Site Sullivan’s Island Ninety Six 843-883-3123 864-543-4068 http://www.nps.gov/fosu http://www.nps.gov/nisi/index.htm Hampton Plantation State Historic Site SC Confederate Relic Room & Military Museum McClellanville Columbia 843-546-9361 803-737-8095 http://southcarolinaparks.com/hampton/ http://www.crr.sc.gov/ Historic Brattonsville Walnut Grove Plantation McConnells Roebuck 803-684-2327 864-576-6546 http://chmuseums.org/brattonsville/ http://www.spartanburghistory.org/walnutgrove.php Historic Camden Revolutionary War Site, Camden 803-432-9841 http://www.historic-camden.net/ This is one of eight brochures produced by the State Historic Preservation Office to promote South Carolina's historic places based on the 2011 Social Studies Standards. -
Kings Mountain: the Celebration That Almost Wasn't 2014 National
The Palmetto Patriot Winner of the Grahame T. Smallwood Award at the 120th Annual Congress Best in the National Society for State Societies of more than 500 members with a publication of more than 10 pages Host Society 2014 National Congress Greenville, South Carolina 1775 1783 THE SOUTH CAROLINA SOCIETY of the SONS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION 2013 Issue 4 Winter 2013 Organized April 1889 Kings Mountain: The celebration that almost wasn’t By Mark C. Anthony heritage organizations from even NSSAR Historic Sites having a location to conduct the an- & Celebrations Chairman nual celebration. Beginning on Friday, Sept. 27, The question was first asked at the I emailed Compatriot Jim Cook in Fall Leadership Meeting, “What will North Carolina from the Fall Lead- the anticipated shutdown of the Fed- ership Meeting in Louisville. Jim eral Government mean for the an- has served as the North Carolina nual Kings Mountain Celebration?” chairman with me being the South It was a good question that need- Carolina chairman for the past few ed immediate attention since “zero years. I asked him to start thinking hour” was only three days away, and about possible alternative locations the planned celebration was only six for the Kings Mountain Celebration. days after that. Among the possible alternatives were By way of background, the plan- the gravesite of Col. Frederick Ham- ning for the 2013 Kings Mountain bright, ancestor of former President Celebration had already taken into General Ed Butler among others, account one major change with re- Kings Mountain State Park, adja- spect to the location of the headquar- cent to the National Military Park, ters hotel for the event after more and downtown Gaffney, South Caro- than 10 years at the Super 8 Hotel in lina, where Gen. -
To Jocassee Gorges Trust Fund
Jocassee Journal Information and News about the Jocassee Gorges Summer/Fall, 2000 Volume 1, Number 2 Developer donates $100,000 to Jocassee Gorges Trust Fund Upstate South Carolina developer Jim Anthony - whose things at Jocassee with the interest from development Cliffs at Keowee Vineyards is adjacent to the Jocassee the Trust Fund. Gorges - recently donated $100,000 to the Jocassee Gorges Trust “We are excited about Cliffs Fund. Communities becoming a partner with the “The job that the conservation community has done at Jocassee DNR on the Jocassee project,” Frampton Gorges has really inspired me,” said Anthony, president of Cliffs said. “Although there is a substantial Communities. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be here at amount of acreage protected in the the right time and to be able to help like this. We’re delighted to Jocassee Gorges, some development play a small part in maintaining the Jocassee Gorges tract.” around it is going to occur. The citizens John Frampton, assistant director for development and national in this state are fortunate to have a affairs with the S.C. Department of Natural Resources, said developer like Jim Anthony whose Anthony’s donation will “jump-start the Trust Fund. This will be a conservation ethic is reflected in his living gift, because we will eventually be able to do many good properties. In the Cliffs Communities’ developments, a lot of the green space and key wildlife portions are preserved and enhanced. Jim Anthony has long been known as a conservationist, and this generous donation further illustrates his commitment to conservation and protection of these unique mountain habitats.” Approved in 1997 by the S.C. -
Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services March 6, 2020
LEGISLATIVE OVERSIGH T COMMITTEE Study of the Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services March 6, 2020 FULL COMMITTEE OPTIONS FULL COMMITTEE ACTION(S) DATE(S) OF FULL STANDARD PRACTICE 12.4 COMMITTEE ACTION(S) (1) Refer the study and Subcommittee study report February 25, 2020 investigation back to the available for consideration Subcommittee or an ad hoc committee for further Subcommittee study presentation February 26, 2020 evaluation; and discussion (2) Approve the Subcommittee’s study; or Approval of the Subcommittee’s February 26, 2020, with (3) Further evaluate the agency as study opportunity for members to a full Committee, utilizing any provide comments open of the available tools of until March 6, 2020 legislative oversight. Legislative Oversight Committee Post Office Box 11867 Columbia, South Carolina 29211 Telephone: (803) 212-6810 • Fax: (803) 212-6811 Room 228 Blatt Building Wm. Weston J. Newton, Chair Laurie Slade Funderburk, First Vice-Chair Micajah P. (Micah) Caskey, IV Gary E. Clary Neal A. Collins Chandra E. Dillard Patricia Moore (Pat) Henegan Lee Hewitt William M. (Bill) Hixon Joseph H. Jefferson, Jr. Jeffrey E. (Jeff) Johnson Mandy Powers Norrell Marvin R. Pendarvis Robert L. Ridgeway, III Tommy M. Stringer Edward R. Tallon, Sr. Bill Taylor John Taliaferro (Jay) West, IV* Robert Q. Williams Chris Wooten Jennifer L. Dobson Research Director Charles L. Appleby, IV Lewis Carter Legal Counsel Research Analyst/Auditor Cathy A. Greer Kendra H. Wilkerson Administration Coordinator Fiscal/Research Analyst Members of the Healthcare and Regulatory Subcommittee and the Subcommittee’s primary staff person are in bold font, and an asterisk designates the chair. -
AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORIC PLACES in SOUTH CAROLINA ////////////////////////////// September 2015
AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORIC PLACES IN SOUTH CAROLINA ////////////////////////////// September 2015 State Historic Preservation Office South Carolina Department of Archives and History should be encouraged. The National Register program his publication provides information on properties in South Carolina is administered by the State Historic in South Carolina that are listed in the National Preservation Office at the South Carolina Department of Register of Historic Places or have been Archives and History. recognized with South Carolina Historical Markers This publication includes summary information about T as of May 2015 and have important associations National Register properties in South Carolina that are with African American history. More information on these significantly associated with African American history. More and other properties is available at the South Carolina extensive information about many of these properties is Archives and History Center. Many other places in South available in the National Register files at the South Carolina Carolina are important to our African American history and Archives and History Center. Many of the National Register heritage and are eligible for listing in the National Register nominations are also available online, accessible through or recognition with the South Carolina Historical Marker the agency’s website. program. The State Historic Preservation Office at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History welcomes South Carolina Historical Marker Program (HM) questions regarding the listing or marking of other eligible South Carolina Historical Markers recognize and interpret sites. places important to an understanding of South Carolina’s past. The cast-aluminum markers can tell the stories of African Americans have made a vast contribution to buildings and structures that are still standing, or they can the history of South Carolina throughout its over-300-year- commemorate the sites of important historic events or history. -
F.L. Wright: Precedent, Analysis & Transformation BROADACRE
F.L. Wright: Precedent, Analysis & Transformation Prof. Kai Gutschow CMU, Arch 48-441 (Project Course) Spring 2005, M/W/F 11:30-12:20, CFA 211 4/15/05 BROADACRE & SQUARE USONIANS Jacobs 1936 Broadacre City, 1935 Pope-Leihey, 1939 Typical Usonian Wall Section Rosenbaum, 1939 F.L. Wright: Precedent, Analysis & Transformation Prof. Kai Gutschow CMU, Arch 48-441 (Project Course) Spring 2005, M/W/F 11:30-12:20, CFA 211 4/15/05 USONIAN ANALYSIS Sergeant, John. FLW’s Usonian Houses McCarter, Robert. FLW. Ch. 9 Jacobs, Herbert. Building with FLW MacKenzie, Archie. “Rewriting the Natural House,” in Morton, Terry. The Pope-Keihey House McCarter, A Primer on Arch’l Principles P. & S. Hanna. FLW’s Hanna House Burns, John. “Usonian Houses,” in Yesterday’s Houses... De Long, David. Auldbrass. Handlin, David. The Modern Home Reisely, Roland Usonia, New York Wright, Gwendolyn. Building the Dream Rosenbaum, Alvin. Usonia. FLW’s Designs... FLW CHRONOLOGY 1932-1959 1932 FLW Autobiography published, 1st ed. (also 1943, 1977) FLW The Disappearing City published (decentralization advocated) May-Oct. "Modern Architecture" exhibit at MoMA, NY (H.R. Hitchcock & P. Johnson, Int’l Style) Malcolm Wiley Hse., Proj. #1, Minneapolis, MN (revised and built 1934) Oct. Taliesin Fellowship formed, 32 apprentices, additions to Taliesin Bldgs. 1933 Jan. Hitler comes to power in Germany, diaspora to America: Gropius (Harvard, 1937), Mies v.d. Rohe (IIT, 1939), Mendelsohn (Berkeley, 1941), A. Aalto (MIT, 1942) Mar. F.D. Roosevelt inaugurated, New Deal (1933-40) “One hundred days.” 25% unemployment. A.A.A., C.C.C. P.W.A., N.R.A., T.V.A., F.D.I.C.