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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Florence County, South Carolina

 
Clickable Map of Florence 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 Florence County, SC (72) Clarendon County, SC (56) Darlington County, SC (69) Dillon County, SC (24) Lee County, SC (24) Marion County, SC (24) Marlboro County, SC (39) Sumter County, SC (67) Williamsburg County, SC (29)  FlorenceCounty(72) Florence County (72)  ClarendonCounty(56) Clarendon County (56)  DarlingtonCounty(69) Darlington County (69)  DillonCounty(24) Dillon County (24)  LeeCounty(24) Lee County (24)  MarionCounty(24) Marion County (24)  MarlboroCounty(39) Marlboro County (39)  SumterCounty(67) Sumter County (67)  WilliamsburgCounty(29) Williamsburg County (29)
Adjacent to Florence County, South Carolina
    Clarendon County (56)
    Darlington County (69)
    Dillon County (24)
    Lee County (24)
    Marion County (24)
    Marlboro County (39)
    Sumter County (67)
    Williamsburg County (29)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — A National Cemetery System
Near East National Cemetery Road (State Road S-21-13) 0.1 miles west of Stockade Drive, on the right when traveling west.
Civil War Dead An estimated 700,000 Union and Confederate soldiers died in the Civil War between April 1861 and April 1865. As the death toll rose, the U.S. government struggled with the urgent but unplanned need to bury fallen Union . . . — Map (db m149425) HM
2South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — A National Cemetery SystemFlorence National Cemetery
Near Stockade Drive 0.1 miles south of East National Cemetery Road (State Road S-21-13), on the right when traveling south.
Civil War Dead An estimated 700,000 Union and Confederate soldiers died in the Civil War between April 1861 and April 1865. As the death toll rose, the U.S. government struggled with the urgent but unplanned need to bury fallen Union . . . — Map (db m149953) HM
3South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — All Gave Some – Some Gave All
Near East National Cemetery Road at South Gaillard Street.
All Gave Some – Some Gave All This building will forever serve as a monument to those who proudly served and protected their country. Dedicated by Florence County Council Roger M. Poston . . . — Map (db m149486) WM
4South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Alone With MemoriesFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
This monument is presented to the people of Florence for their exceptional hospitality and kindness. Sculpted in memory of my parents - Fannie and Marcus Palkovich Survivors of Concentration Camps Auschwitz and Mauthausen and . . . — Map (db m149808) WM
5South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-29 — American Legion Post #1 / 2nd Lieutenant Fred H. Sexton
On E. Palmetto St. (U.S. 76), on the left when traveling east.
American Legion Post #1 This post, organized in May 1919 and chartered by national headquarters in June 1919, was the first American Legion post in S.C. Florence County veterans J.D. Smyser, R.B. Fulton, and N.S. Lachicotte represented S.C. at . . . — Map (db m38025) HM
6South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-26 — Atomic Bomb Accident at Mars Bluff, March 11, 1958
On East Palmetto Street (U.S. 76) at University Road, on the right when traveling west on East Palmetto Street.
In 1958, in the midst of the Cold War, the U.S. Air Force accidentally dropped an atomic bomb near here. The unarmed 7,600-lb., 10'8"-long bomb was aboard a B-47E bomber on a training mission headed for England. Its high-explosive trigger detonated . . . — Map (db m132036) HM
7South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Brooke Rifled Cannon, VI.4-inch
Near East National Cemetery Road at South Gaillard Street, on the left when traveling west.
Brooke Rifled Cannon, VI.4-inch S-53 1864 Confederate Naval Foundry & Ordinance Works Selma, Alabama 10,600 pounds 142” length On loan from United States General Services Administration The VI.4-inch Brooke has been . . . — Map (db m150002) HM
8South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Brooke Rifled Cannon, VII-inch
Near East National Cemetery Road at South Gaillard Street, on the right when traveling west.
Brooke rifled cannon, VII-inch S-46 1864 Confederate Naval Foundry & Ordnance Works Selma, Alabama 15,000 pounds 147" lenght On loan from United States General Services Administration Seven-inch Brooke rifled . . . — Map (db m150036) HM
9South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — CarillonFlorence National Cemetery
Near East National Cemetery Road 0.1 miles from Stockade Drive, on the right when traveling west.
AMVETS dedicated this Carillon as a living memorial to America’s Veterans who served their country honorably for the cause of freedom June 6, 1987 Florence National Cemetery Florence South Carolina “… As these . . . — Map (db m149439) WM
10South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21 10 — Christ Episcopal Church
On N Williston Road (State Highway 327).
Marker front: First organized as a chapel in 1843 by the Rev. N.P. Tillinghast of Trinity Church, Society Hill, this church was formally established as Christ Church, Mars Bluff, in 1856. The Rev. Augustus Moore, who took over the chapel in . . . — Map (db m20488) HM
11South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Civil War Union Burials
Near East National Cemetery Road (State Highway 13).
(Front): One each side of this marker lie the remains of approximately 2300 Union soldiers who died as prisoners in the Florence Prison Stockade, between September 1864 and February 1865. The Stockade was located across Cemetery Street on . . . — Map (db m45963) HM
12South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Dahlgren, IX-inch
Near East National Cemetery Road at South Gaillard Street, on the right when traveling west.
Dahlgren, IX-inch FP 573 1862 Fort Pitt Foundry Pittsburg, Pennsylvania 9,000 pounds 131.5” length On loan from United States General Services Administration This IX-inch Dahlgren smooth-bore cannon, . . . — Map (db m150034) HM
13South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Desert Storm
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
To the men and women who answered the call DESERT STORM 1991 — Map (db m52248) WM
14South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-5 — Ebenezer Church
On S. Ebenezer Rd. (County Route 112) 0.1 miles north of Pine Needles Road, on the left when traveling south.
Side A In January of 1778 Ebenezer Baptist Church was constituted by pioneer minister Evan Pugh and Richard Furman, for whom Furman University is named. Admitted to the Charleston Baptist Association in 1778, the church was incorporated in . . . — Map (db m38022) HM
15South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-19 — Florence Depot (1852) / Wilmington & Manchester RR
On Hoffmeyer Rd. just from W. Darlington Street Ext., on the right when traveling west.
Florence Depot The original depot named Florence was built here in 1852, where the Wilmington & Manchester RR crossed present-day Hoffmeyer Rd. It was named for Florence Harllee (1848-1927), daughter of the railroad's president, William W. . . . — Map (db m38023) HM
16South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Florence National Cemetery
On Stockade Drive 0.1 miles south of E. National Cemetery Road.
The Florence National Cemetery established in 1865 is this day re-dedicated to the memory of all the patriotic men and women who answered their country's call to service their inspiring contribution will help preserve in the . . . — Map (db m45967) HM
17South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Florence National Cemetery
Near East National Cemetery Road 0.1 miles from Stockade Drive, on the right when traveling west.
National Cemetery In 1865, the U.S. Army quartermaster general designated the original 3.76-acre prison cemetery as Florence National Cemetery. It contains not only the bodies of Union prisoners who died in Florence, but soldiers removed . . . — Map (db m149474) HM
18South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Florence National Cemetery
Near Stockade Drive 0.1 miles south of East National Cemetery Road, on the right when traveling south.
Florence Prison Stockade In early September 1864, General William Tecumseh Sherman's Union army took Atlanta and came within striking range of the large Confederate prison at Andersonville, Georgia. he Confederate government responded to . . . — Map (db m149984) HM
19South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Florence Stockade Monument
On East National Cemetery Road (State Highway 13), on the right when traveling east.
This boulder was placed here by the United Daughters of the Confederacy of Florence, S.C. January 27, 1947 To record the fact that directly south of this spot was situated a stockade where 6,500 Federal prisoners were . . . — Map (db m45962) HM
20South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Florence Veterans Park
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
Florence Veterans Park Dedicated November 11, 2008 to all Pee Dee area veterans who have proudly served in the United States Armed Forces. Committee Members In recognition of their vision and commitment to this worthy project. Rick Walden, . . . — Map (db m52256) HM
21South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Francis Marion Memorial Highway
On Palmetto Street (U.S. 76/301), on the right when traveling west.
Erected in 1971 by the state of South Carolina as a memorial to General Francis Marion, the "Swamp Fox" whose guerrilla war tactics during American Revolution made him the chief scourge of the British in eastern South Carolina — Map (db m52273) HM
22South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Gold Star Family MonumentFlorence Veterans Park
Near Woody Jones Boulevard 0.4 miles east of West Radio Drive, on the left when traveling east.
The Gold Star Family Monument recognizes the pain, grief, and agony that Gold Star Family members endure with the death of a parent, child, spouse, sibling, or other loved ones who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving in the United States . . . — Map (db m149949) WM
23South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Guns of the CSS Peedeecast iron - 1860s
Near East National Cemetery Road (State Highway S-21-13) at South Gaillard Street, on the left when traveling west.
During the Civil War, the Confederate Navy operated a large and well-guarded shipyard on the east bank of the great Pee Dee River at Mars Bluff, Marion County. The largest vessel constructed at the site was the 150 ft. wooden gunship CSS Peedee, . . . — Map (db m149488) HM
24South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Henry Timrod
On Timrod Park Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
Henry Timrod 1828 ~ 1867 Poet Laureate of the Confederacy ~ * ~Within this building he taught, among others, “Katie,” later to become his wife. — Map (db m54612) HM
25South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-15 — Hewn-Timber Cabins
On State Highway 76 at Wallace Woods Road, on the right when traveling east on State Highway 76.
The African Americans who built the two hewn-timber cabins that stand 200 yds. S. on Wallace Woods Road were brought to Mars Bluff as slaves in 1836. They lived in these cabins on the cotton plantation of J. Eli Gregg, in what was then Marion . . . — Map (db m18203) HM
26South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Home SafeFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
Dedicated to the men and women who have served in our nation’s Armed Forces and to their families who have provided fidelity and loving support. Home Safe was designed and sculpted by Florence resident and internationally . . . — Map (db m149714) WM
27South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-25 — Hopewell Presbyterian Church
On Old River Road (County Route 57), on the left when traveling north.
Front This church, organized ca. 1770, is the first Presbyterian church in what is now Florence County. Many of its founding families came to S.C. from Scotland and Ireland. The first church here, a frame building, stood across Old River . . . — Map (db m37328) HM
28South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — KoreaFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H McLeod Blvd.
In Honor of All Korean War Veterans Pusan • Inchon • Chosin Reservoir • Pork Chop Hill Old Baldy • Outpost Harry, and Heartbreak Ridge Were All Crucial Battles Where Brave Men and Women Served in the Treacherous . . . — Map (db m149698) WM
29South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-1 — Moses S. Haynsworth
On Mechanicsville Road (County Route 63) at Range Way, on the right when traveling north on Mechanicsville Road.
Born in Darlington District in 1845, this Confederate War veteran witnessed the firing attack on the Union steamer Star of the West, as it attempted to reinforce Ft. Sumter Jan. 9, 1861. He participated in skirmishes at Tullifinny River near . . . — Map (db m38019) HM
30South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-23 — Pisgah Methodist Church
On N. Ebenezer Rd. 0.2 miles north of Hoffmeyer Road, on the right when traveling west.
Side A This church, founded in 1806 in what was Darlington District until Florence County was founded in 1888, grew out of an early Methodist “Society.” Rev. Thomas Humphries (d. 1820), who served this and other area circuits, . . . — Map (db m38024) HM
31South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — POW✯MIA
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
(Front): In honor of all American Prisoners of War and Missing in Action Dedicated by Rolling Thunder® South Carolina Chapter 4 Florence 2008 (Reverse): POW✯MIA emblem, WWI, . . . — Map (db m52250) HM
32South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Purple Heart Recipients
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
In honor of Purple Heart Recipients They paid for our freedom with blood. All gave some, some gave all. — Map (db m52252) HM
33South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — September 11, 2001
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
This monument contains limestone damaged in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. It was recovered from the west facade of the Pentagon and is placed in remembrance of the 2,977 individuals killed in the attacks on our homeland. 184 perished at . . . — Map (db m52253) WM
34South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — The Cruiser Pee Dee, C.S.N.
Near Spruce Street.
Front The Cruiser Pee Dee, C. S. N. Built C.S.N. Navy Yard, Pee Dee, S. C. 1864 Burned to avoid capture March 15, 1865. “No Nation rose so white and fair, None fell so pure of crime.” Reverse Boulder Donated by . . . — Map (db m54660) HM
35South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — The Marine Corps League of Florence, SC
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
Uncommon valor was a common virtue. United States Marine Corps established Nov. 10, 1775 Detachment 410 chartered Oct. 14, 1977 Monument dedicated May 1, 2010 The Julian D. Dusenbury MCL detachment 410 honors all Marines who served . . . — Map (db m52249) HM
36South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — U.S. Navy MonumentFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
Department of the Navy United States of America To the Men and Women of the United States Navy Fair Winds and Following Seas — Map (db m150281) WM
37South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — United States Air Force MemorialFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
Let this monument serve as a reminder of the men and women who have served in our nation’s Air Force. Their loyalty and their sacrifice will never be forgotten. — Map (db m149759) WM
38South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — United States Army MonumentFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
Loyalty ★ Duty ★ Respect ★ Selfless Service ★ Honor ★ Integrity ★ Personal Courage — Map (db m150046) WM
39South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — United States Merchant Marine MonumentFlorence Veterans Park
Near S Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
“In Honor of the Thousands of Merchant Mariners for Faithful and Dedicated Service to the United States of America” — Map (db m150040) WM
40South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — US Coast Guard MonumentFlorida Veterans Park
Near S Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
Dedicated to the Men and Women of the United States Coast Guard Semper Paratus Always Prepared US Coast Guard Cutter Comanche (WPG-76) Anchor • The 165-foot “A” class cutter, Comanche, was . . . — Map (db m149928) WM
41South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — Vietnam Veterans MonumentFlorence Veterans Park
Near South Woody Jones Boulevard 0.3 miles north of David H. McLeod Boulevard.
Dedicated To Those Who Served In Vietnam 1955 1975 Reverse: Each Star Represents 1000 Fallen Americans — Map (db m149706) WM
42South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-2 — William Gee
On W. Palmetto Street (U.S. 76) just from S. Cashua Drive, on the right when traveling east.
A veteran of the Revolution, William Gee served as a private with the Continental Line of N.C. and moved to this area before 1797. He was one of the original members of the Washington Society, organized in 1803 to establish an academy on Jeffries . . . — Map (db m38021) HM
43South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21 21 — William H. Johnson Birthplace
On Eest Palmetto Street (U.S. 76) just west of Kemp Street.
Marker Front: William Henry Johnson (1901-1970), one of the most important African-American artists of the 20th century, was born nearby on Cox Street. His family later lived on the corner of Cheves and Kemp Streets. In 1918, at the age of . . . — Map (db m20490) HM
44South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-8 — William W. Harllee
On Old River Road (County Route 57) 0.2 miles east of Francis Marion Road, on the right when traveling north.
President of Wilmington & Manchester Railroad and a founder of the city of Florence, Harllee (1812-1897) was also a general in the SC Militia, signer of Ordinance of Secession, Lt. Governor (1860-62), member of the General Assembly, and president . . . — Map (db m37307) HM
45South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-31 — Wilson School / Wilson High School
On E. Palmetto St. (U.S. 76) just from S. Dargan Street, on the left when traveling east.
Wilson School Wilson School, later Wilson High School, was the first public school in Florence, and stood here from 1866 to 1906. At first a private school for black children, it was established by the New England Branch of the Freedmen’s . . . — Map (db m38026) HM
46South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — World War I MemorialFlorence Veterans Park
Near Woody Jones Boulevard 0.4 miles east of West Radio Drive, on the left when traveling east.
Dulce et Decorum est Pro Patria Mori In Memory of the Service Men From Florence County, South Carolina Who gave their lives in the World War 1914 – 1918 To The End That Liberty Should not perish from the Earth White . . . — Map (db m149858) WM
47South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — World War II Memorial
Near Woody Jones Boulevard.
Dedicated to the Men and Women of Florence County who answered the call of America in World War II *and* In memory of those who gave their young lives for God and Country Placed by The United Daughters of the Confederacy of Florence, South Carolina . . . — Map (db m52255) HM
48South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — World War II Memorial
Near Spruce Street.
These pines dedicated with reverence as a living memorial to those who served in World War II Wildwood Garden Club February 2, 1945 — Map (db m54662) HM
49South Carolina (Florence County), Florence — 21-6 — Young Farm
On W Palmetto Street (U.S. 76) at Twin Church Road (South Carolina Highway 106), on the right when traveling west on W Palmetto Street.
In 1925 U. S. Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, later U. S. President, inspected Fred Young's dairy farm following recognition of one of its Jerseys, Sensation's Mikado's Millie, as a world champion butter-fat producer. The house . . . — Map (db m11178) HM
50South Carolina (Florence County), Hannah — 21-20 — Hannah
On U.S. 378 at Bay Road, on the left when traveling east on U.S. 378.
[Front] Hannah, named for the Hannah/Hanna family, was known as Cane Branch or Lynches River before a post office was opened here in 1887. William S. Hannah (1807-1876), a farmer and merchant, built his house nearby in 1847 and also ran a . . . — Map (db m37310) HM
51South Carolina (Florence County), Jamestown — 21-22 — Jamestown
On Old Marion Hwy. (County Route 24) at Jamestown Road, on the left when traveling east on Old Marion Hwy..
[Front] This African American community, which flourished here for 70 years, has its origins in a 105-acre tract bought in 1870 by former slave Ervin James (1815-1872). James, determined to own his own farm instead of being dependent on . . . — Map (db m37338) HM
52South Carolina (Florence County), Johnsonville — 21-4 — Marion at Port’s Ferry / Asbury at Port’s Ferry
On Kingsburg Highway (State Highway 51) at East Trinity Road (County Road 21-909), on the left when traveling south on Kingsburg Highway.
Marion at Port’s Ferry. Port’s Ferry, 3 miles NE on the Pee Dee, was owned and operated by Frances Port (c. 1725–1812), widow of Thomas Port, who was a member of the Provincial Congress from Prince Frederick’s Parish. This was a strategic . . . — Map (db m27932) HM
53South Carolina (Florence County), Johnsonville — 21-3 — Witherspoon’s Ferry / Johnsonville
On Kingsburg Highway (State Highway 51) north of White Oak Drive (County Route 21-647), on the left when traveling south.
Witherspoon’s Ferry. In use during the American Revolution, Witherspoon’s Ferry was the site at which Francis Marion accepted command of the Williamsburg Militia in 1780. Ownership of the ferry lands passed from Robert to John Witherspoon in . . . — Map (db m27921) HM
54South Carolina (Florence County), Johnsonville — Witherspoon’s Ferry: Francis Marion Takes Command
Near State Highway 41/51, on the left when traveling south.
Late in the summer of 1780, Maj. Gen. Horatio Gates led a Continental army toward South Carolina to attempt to roll back the British conquest of the province. As Gates prepared to meet the British at Camden, he sent Col. Francis Marion ~ a . . . — Map (db m53899) HM
55South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-9 — Browntown
On Johnsonville Highway (State Highway 341), on the left when traveling west.
This area is part of several royal landgrants to Moses Brown in 1768-69 which developed into a family community known as Browntown. Family holdings here eventually comprised over 8,000 acres. Many indications of pioneering ingenuity and farm-related . . . — Map (db m39094) HM
56South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-37 — Church Street/Main Street
On North Church Street (Business U.S. 378) at East Main Street (State Highway 341), on the right when traveling south on North Church Street.
Church Street Before the 1820s this intersection of two major roads, one from Georgetown to Camden and the other from Charleston to Cheraw, was popularly called "the crosswords." After Arron Graham built a house here ca. 1930, the area became . . . — Map (db m103911) HM
57South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-16 — Greater St. James A.M.E. Church
On Moore Street.
[Front] This church was founded in 1883 by a Rev. Hill and twenty-five charter members. Early services were held in a member’s house on E. Main Street. The congregation purchased a lot at the corner of Lake and N. Church Streets in 1885 and . . . — Map (db m37309) HM
58South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-40 — H.H. Singletary Building
On East Main Street (Business U.S. 378) at South Acline Street, on the right when traveling east on East Main Street.
(side 1) This two-story commercial building was built in 1910 by Henry Horace Singletary (1848-1912) as the H.H. Singletary Company, with a grocery store on the first floor. Singletary, perhaps the most prominent businessman and civic . . . — Map (db m103913) HM
59South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-28 — Lake City
On Main Street at Church Street on Main Street.
[Front] This area, in what was then Williamsburg Township, was settled as early as 1754 by members of the Dick, Graham, McAllister, Scott, and other families. Several residents served under Francis Marion during the Revolution. By the 1820s . . . — Map (db m37311) HM
60South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-42 — Palmetto State Bank Robbery
On West Main Street (Business U.S. 378) at North Acline Avenue, on the right when traveling west on West Main Street.
(side 1) Constructed in 1907, this building originally housed Farmers and Merchants Bank. In 1934 the newly formed Palmetto State Bank opened here. On Sept. 5, 1934 the bank was robbed by three armed men. The bank had larger than normal . . . — Map (db m103914) HM
61South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-33 — W.T. Askins House
On South Alcine Street at West Thomas Street, on the right when traveling south on South Alcine Street.
This Folk Victorian house, with pierced brackets and fretwork on its two-tiered porch, was built ca. 1895 for William Thomas Askins (1859-1932). Askins, a merchant and farmer, built and operated five stores here beginning in the 1890s, including the . . . — Map (db m103915) HM
62South Carolina (Florence County), Lake City — 21-41 — Whitehead Infirmary
On East Main Street (South Carolina Route 341) at Rodgers Street, on the left when traveling east on East Main Street.
Dr. James Whitehead (1906-2004) was a graduate of Lake City H.S. and the Medical University of S.C. After completing his internship at Spartanburg General, he returned to Lake City where he practiced medicine for 55 years. In 1938 he oversaw the . . . — Map (db m104122) HM
63South Carolina (Florence County), Mars Bluff — 21-17 — Mt. Zion Methodist Church
On Liberty Chapel Rd. when traveling east.
[Front] This church, founded in 1868 with Rev. James Wesley Johnson as its first minister, held its early services in a brush arbor. In 1870 trustees purchased this 1 ¾ acre tract to build a “Negro Schoolhouse” sponsored by the . . . — Map (db m37336) HM
64South Carolina (Florence County), Mars Bluff — 21-14 — Mt. Zion Rosenwald School
On Liberty Chapel Road, on the right when traveling east.
[Front] This school, built in 1925, was the first public school for African American students in the Mars Bluff community. One of more than 5000 schools in the South funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation, it features a standard . . . — Map (db m37335) HM
65South Carolina (Florence County), Mars Bluff — 21-27 — Red Doe
On Francis Marion Rd. (State Highway 327), on the right when traveling north.
This house was built in 1846 for Evander A. Gregg (1818-1874), a planter in what was Marion District. Its high masonry basement and porch form, indigenous to northeastern S.C., make it a fine example of a raised Carolina cottage. It was acquired by . . . — Map (db m37306) HM
66South Carolina (Florence County), Mill Branch — Burch's Mill: South Carolina’s First Civil War Nears It’s End
On Mill Branch Road.
In South Carolina, the Revolutionary War had many of the characteristics of a civil war, with those who supported independence, (the Whigs or Patriots) fighting against neighbors and kinsfolk who remained loyal to the King (the Tories or Loyalists). . . . — Map (db m115304) HM
67South Carolina (Florence County), Pamplico — 21-7 — Dewitt Bluff
On County Route 57 at Bluff Road, on the right when traveling north on County Route 57.
[Front] Located about 1/2 mile east, this bluff, part of a Royal landgrant to Edward Crofts in 1740, was named for the DeWitt family, who settled nearby prior to 1767. This area of Prince Frederick Parish was known as Queensborough . . . — Map (db m37313) HM
68South Carolina (Florence County), Quinby — 21-13 — Ney School / Back Swamp School
On Pocket Rd. (County Route 26) at Backswamp Drive, on the right when traveling east on Pocket Rd..
Ney School About 1843 Robert Rogers (1808-1882), a planter at "Blooming Grove" in the Back Swamp community of what was then Darlington District, built a plantation schoolhouse and hired Peter Stuart Ney (d. 1846) to teach his children. The . . . — Map (db m37334) HM
69South Carolina (Florence County), Quinby — 21-11 — Roseville Plantation
On North Williston Road (State Highway 327) 0.2 miles north of E. Pocket Road, on the right when traveling north.
Roseville Plantation was established by a royal grant before the American Revolution and a house was built here ca. 1771 for the Dewitt family. Richard Brockinton (d. ca. 1843), planter and state representative, purchased Roseville in 1821. Most of . . . — Map (db m37327) HM
70South Carolina (Florence County), Quinby — 21-18 — Roseville Plantation Slave And Freedman's Cemetery / Clarke Cemetery
On North Williston Road (State Highway 327) 0.6 miles from East Pocket Road, on the right when traveling north.
Roseville Plantation Slave And Freedman's Cemetery This was originally the slave cemetery for Roseville Plantation. Roseville, established about 1771 by the Dewitt family, was later owned by the Brockinton, Bacot, and Clarke families from the . . . — Map (db m37337) HM
71South Carolina (Florence County), Quinby — 21-12 — William R. Johnson House / The Columns
On Old Marion Hwy. (County Route 24) at Ramkin Plantation Road, on the right when traveling west on Old Marion Hwy..
William R. Johnson HouseThis Greek Revival house was built ca. 1854 for William R. Johnson, (1813-1893), physician, planter, and legislator in what was then Marion District. Johnson, an 1838 graduate of the Medical College of S.C., later served . . . — Map (db m37330) HM
72South Carolina (Florence County), Timmonsville — 21-24 — The Assassination Of Rep. Alfred Rush
On W. John Paul Jones Rd. (County Route 35) 0.5 miles east of Peniel Crossroads, on the right when traveling west.
[Front] Alfred Rush (d. 1876), a black state representative for two terms during Reconstruction, was assassinated near here, about 1/2 mi. from his home, on May 13, 1876. Rush, who represented what was then Darlington County in the S.C. . . . — Map (db m37339) HM
 
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Nov. 25, 2020