Marker Logo HMdb.org THE HISTORICAL
MARKER DATABASE
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
After filtering for Texas, 99 entries match your criteria.
 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Greenwood County, South Carolina

 
Clickable Map of Greenwood County, South Carolina and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Greenwood County, SC (99) Abbeville County, SC (74) Edgefield County, SC (63) Laurens County, SC (53) McCormick County, SC (36) Newberry County, SC (38) Saluda County, SC (32)  GreenwoodCounty(99) Greenwood County (99)  AbbevilleCounty(74) Abbeville County (74)  EdgefieldCounty(63) Edgefield County (63)  LaurensCounty(53) Laurens County (53)  McCormickCounty(36) McCormick County (36)  NewberryCounty(38) Newberry County (38)  SaludaCounty(32) Saluda County (32)
Adjacent to Greenwood County, South Carolina
    Abbeville County (74)
    Edgefield County (63)
    Laurens County (53)
    McCormick County (36)
    Newberry County (38)
    Saluda County (32)
 
Touch name on list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1South Carolina (Greenwood County), Bradley — 24-18 — Cedar Springs A.R.P. Church
2South Carolina (Greenwood County), Bradley — 24-8 — Londonborough Settlement
3South Carolina (Greenwood County), Bradley — 24-9 — Patrick H. Bradley — 1813–1887
4South Carolina (Greenwood County), Donalds — 377 — Greenville Presbyterian Church — American Presbyterian and Reformed Historical Site
5South Carolina (Greenwood County), Epworth — 24-13 — Dr. Benjamin E. Mays
6South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Constance Pope Maxwell — 1875-1883
7South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Dr. Benjamin James Sanders, Jr. — 1899-1990
8South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Emerald Farm — A Working Goat Farm
9South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — 24-11 — Francis Salvador — 1747-1776
10South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Greenwood County Confederate Monument
11South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Greenwood SC Memorial Marker
12South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — In God We Trust
13South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — 24-6 — John Henry Logan
14South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — 24-7 — John Perkins Barratt — May 11, 1795 - September 29, 1859
15South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — 24-14 — Louis Booker Wright
16South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Magnolia Cemetery
17South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Main Street — "Broadest Street in the World'
18South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Marshal Ferdinand Foch
19South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Mathews Mill Veterans Monument
20South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Mount Pisgah A.M.E. Church
21South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Municipal Fountain
22South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Old Greenwood Cemetery
23South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — 24-16 — Rock Presbyterian Church
24South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — Textile Workers Monument
25South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — To The People of Greenwood County
26South Carolina (Greenwood County), Greenwood — World War Memorial
27South Carolina (Greenwood County), Hodges — 24-17 — Good Hope Baptist Church
28South Carolina (Greenwood County), Hodges — Moorefield Memorial Highway
29South Carolina (Greenwood County), Hodges — Old Cokesbury and Masonic Female College and Conference School
30South Carolina (Greenwood County), Hodges — Park’s / Greenwood County
31South Carolina (Greenwood County), Hodges — Payne Institute
32South Carolina (Greenwood County), Hodges — 24-5 — Tabernacle Cemetery
33South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — "Light Horse Harry" Lee Takes the Stockade Fort — June 12, 1781
34South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — 96 — Ninety Six National Historic Site
35South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Approach Trench — June 2, 1781
36South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Cherokee — (Tsalagi)
37South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Covered Way — 1781
38South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Early Life in the Backcountry — Gouedy's Trading Post and Fort Ninety Six
39South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Environmental Change From Forest to Park
40South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — First Blood Shed for Liberty
41South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — First Parallel — May 28-June 1, 1781
42South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Gouedy Trail and Charleston Road
43South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — In Memoriam
44South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Island Ford Road
45South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — James Birmingham
46South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — 24-10 — John Waller — 1741-1802
47South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Lake Greenwood — A Changing Landscape
48South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Law and Order in the Carolina Backcountry — 1773 — The Jail and the Courthouse —
49South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Logan Log House
50South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Logan Log House
51South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — M-60 A3 Main Battle Tank
52South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Militiamen
53South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Monument to James Birmingham
54South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — New Priorities of Protection
55South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Ninety Six — 1775 — A Colonial Center in a Time of Change —
56South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — 24-21 — Ninety Six Colored School
57South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Ninety Six in the American Revolution — The War in the Southern Colonies
58South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Ninety Six National Historic Site — A Revolutionary War Landmark
59South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Ninety Six National Historic Site — A Revolutionary War Landmark
60South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Ninety Six National Historic Site — A Revolutionary War Landmark
61South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Ninety Six National Historic Site / Greenwood County
62South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — 24-3 — Old Ninety Six — (2 miles south)
63South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Patriot Soldier
64South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — 24-4 — Preston Brooks Dinner
65South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Second Approach Trench — June 6, 1781
66South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Second Parallel — June 3, 1781
67South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Sharpshooter
68South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Siege Trenches
69South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — 24-15 — Siloam Baptist Church
70South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Spring Branch
71South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The American Revolution Comes to the South — November 18-21, 1775 — Six Years Before the Star Fort Siege There Was Williamson's Fort —
72South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Artillery — June 1, 1781
73South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Attack
74South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The British Fortifications
75South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Forlorn Hope — June 18, 1781
76South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Lost Town of Cambridge — 1783 - c. 1850
77South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Mine — Begun June 9, 1781
78South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Patriot Force Arrives — May 21-22, 1781
79South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Patriots Lay Siege to the Star Fort — May 22-June 18, 1781
80South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Patriots Lay Siege to the Star Fort — May 22-June 18, 1781
81South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Rifle Tower — June 13, 1781
82South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Siege of Ninety Six — 1781
83South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Star Fort — Heart of the Loyalist Defense
84South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Stockade Fort — Ninety Six National Historic Site
85South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — The Well — Begin June 12, 1781
86South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Trader with Pack Horse
87South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Walking Tour of the Park
88South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Welcome to the Lake Greenwood State Recreation Area
89South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Why Did the British Burn Ninety Six? — July 1781
90South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Why Is It Called Ninety Six? — A Colonial Backcountry Settlement
91South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Wm. Pierce Bennett Kinard
92South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ninety Six — Woman and Child
93South Carolina (Greenwood County), Promised Land — Historical Promised Land Community
94South Carolina (Greenwood County), Troy — 24-2 — Long Cane Associated Reformed Presbyterian Church
95South Carolina (Greenwood County), Troy — 24-1 — Long Canes Massacre
96South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ware Shoals — Benjamin DeWitt Riegel — 1878-1941
97South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ware Shoals — Marion P. Carnell Bridge
98South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ware Shoals — The William T. Jones, III Bridge
99South Carolina (Greenwood County), Ware Shoals — Ware Shoals Veterans Memorial
 
Paid Advertisement
Nov. 25, 2020