After filtering for Texas, 116 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 116 are listed here. ⊲ Previous 100
Historical Markers and War Memorials in Pickens County, South Carolina
Adjacent to Pickens County, South Carolina
▶ Anderson County (164) ▶ Greenville County (308) ▶ Oconee County (63) ▶ Transylvania County, North Carolina (36)
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
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Originally built in the early 1800's by the family of Benjamin Hagood on family land about a half mile from here, this is the third place that this venerable old log cabin has stood.
It is thought because of the unusual interior log wall, . . . — — Map (db m20137) HM |
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The Hagoods and the Mauldins
James E. Hagood, son of local farmer and landowner Benjamin Hagood, built this house in 1856 in the town of Pickens Court House, about 14 miles west of here. The house was moved to this site in 1868. James . . . — — Map (db m11783) HM |
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Ongoing development at this mill site includes a variety of ventures. Significant among these is the recent relocation and restoration of this Cabin. In the late 1780's the Secona Baptist Church was organized in Pickens. Named after the Cherokee . . . — — Map (db m20142) HM |
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Pickens County Museum of Art and History
The Pickens County Museum collects, preserves, and exhibits local artifacts. It features exhibits on the Cherokee Indians, General Andrew Pickens, Vice President John C. Calhoun, pioneer life, . . . — — Map (db m11789) HM |
| | In Memoriam
Thomas Jacob Mauldin
1870-1931
First Judge 18th Judicial
Circuit of S.C. 1914-1981. — — Map (db m11738) HM |
| Near Pendleton Street 0.1 miles south of West Main Street. |
| | To the Valiant Citizen-Soldiers of Pickens County who Answered their Call to Duty and Made the Supreme Sacrifice
For our future generations, their youth, they gave away, never again to see the land between the Oolenoy River Valley and the . . . — — Map (db m20092) WM |
| | . . . — — Map (db m11787) HM |
| Near Miracle Hill Road (State Highway 39-298). |
| | Cornelius Keith
Born in Loch Lomond, Scotland
Of Royal Lineage
1715 Scottish Royal Seal 1808
Dating from 1010 A.D.
Original pioneer of Oolenoy settlement.
Started about 1743, married Juda Thompson.
Reared twelve . . . — — Map (db m47399) HM |
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In the cemetery of Oolenoy Baptist Church is the grave of Cornelius Keith, born in Loch Lomond, Scotland. Of royal lineage, the Keith family came to South Carolina from Virginia. Original pioneers of Oolenoy Valley, acquired land from the . . . — — Map (db m33611) HM |
| On Miracle Hill Road (State Highway 39-298). |
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[Front]:
This church, named for the Cherokee chief, Woolenoy - the spelling was changed to Oolenoy in 1827 - was organized in 1795 by Rev. John Chastain, who became its first minister. By 1797, with 50 members, it was admitted to the . . . — — Map (db m11718) HM |
| On Table Rock Road, on the right when traveling west. |
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This community, settled before 1800, was named "Pumpkin Town" by an anonymous early traveler awed by the sight of the Oolenoy Valley covered with huge yellow pumpkins. It and Pickens Court House (Old Pickens) were the only two towns in . . . — — Map (db m11725) HM |
| On South Main Street (State Highway 133) south of Liberty Highway, on the right when traveling south. |
| | (side 1) The Cherokee Path was once part of an important trade network that connected the Upper, Middle, and Lower Cherokee towns in the west with English settlements at Charles Town and, later, inland outposts like Fort Congaree, in the . . . — — Map (db m133608) HM |
| On Keowee Baptist Church Road 0.5 miles south of Talton Road, on the right when traveling south. |
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(side 1)
Fort Prince George, covered by Lake Keowee since 1968, was built nearby in 1753, near the unofficial boundary between Cherokee lands and white settlements. Across the Keowee River from the Cherokee Lower Town of Keowee, it was . . . — — Map (db m78989) HM |
| On South Main Street (State Highway 133), on the right when traveling south. |
| | In Honor Of
Six Mile Military Personnel of All Wars
and
In Special Tribute to Our
Congressional Medal of Honor Recipients
Charles H. Barker
Korea
James D. Howe
Vietnam
William A. McWhorter
World War II
. . . — — Map (db m55170) HM |
| On Moorefield Memorial Highway (U.S. 178) 2.3 miles north of Laurel Valley Road (State Road S39-237), on the right when traveling north. |
| | In Memory Of Charles Henry Moorefield State Highway Engineer of South Carolina 1920 — 1935 — — Map (db m142550) HM |
| On Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway (State Highway 11) at Roy F. Jones Highway (State Highway 39-143) on Cherokee Foothills Scenic Highway. |
| | Named in 1984 in Honor of Longtime S.C. Highway department employee whose career of service spanned over half a century, all in Pickens County including 44 years 1928 - 1972 as principal supervisor of maintenance work
The Department's First 50-Year . . . — — Map (db m21052) HM |
116 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 116 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100