Greenville is the county seat for Greenville County
Taylors is in Greenville County
Greenville County(378) ► ADJACENT TO GREENVILLE COUNTY Abbeville County(75) ► Anderson County(180) ► Laurens County(53) ► Pickens County(161) ► Spartanburg County(129) ► Henderson County, North Carolina(99) ► Polk County, North Carolina(35) ► Transylvania County, North Carolina(61) ►
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This camp, named in honor of John Sevier, Lieut. Col., N.C. militia, 1777, Col., 1781, Brig. Gen., U.S.P.A., 1796, was approved as cantonment site May 21, 1917. The 30th Division trained here from August 28, 1917 to May 1, 1918; the 81st, from May . . . — — Map (db m10475) HM
[Front]:
Dr. Burwell Chick opened a resort at these mineral springs in 1840. A spacious hotel and cottages accommodated a large number of summer guests. After Dr. Chick's death, the springs were operated by his sons Pettus and Reuben, and . . . — — Map (db m22383) HM
"Where the mountains rise in beauty"
The Grand Old Mountain View State
High School stood on this spot. From
1924 to 1954 some 2000 students
passed through her doors. This
memorial was erected in 1966 by the
Mountain View Alumni Association . . . — — Map (db m10194) HM
(side 1)
This is one of more than fifty houses built in 1923-24 for employees of Southern Bleachery, a textile processing plant opened at the east end of Mill St. in 1924. The mill village and plant were designed by J.E. Sirrine & Co. . . . — — Map (db m220023) HM
(front)
Taylors First Baptist Church traces its origins to the years of the American Civil War. The church organized as Chick Springs Church on August 28, 1864 at the conclusion of a week of camp meetings. The congregation first met near . . . — — Map (db m198227) HM
[Front]:
Tigerville got its name from early settlers who settled here shortly after the Revolution. They called bobcats they saw here "tygers," and named the nearby Tyger River, Head of Tyger Baptist Church, later Tyger Baptist Church, . . . — — Map (db m18044) HM
This original stone which formed one of the four
Pillars of the first building of Tyger Baptist
Church, the first in this area of South Carolina
near the head of Tyger River, about the year 1800.
I will praise thee, O Lord, with my whole . . . — — Map (db m17381) HM
Named in 1984 in honor
of
pioneer settler of Upper
Greenville County
who entered this state
from Georgia in 1787
and whose descendants
have lived on these lands
ever since.
Mr. Few is said to have
built the first bridge
and . . . — — Map (db m10706) HM