On North Mountain Street at Hames Street, in the median on North Mountain Street.
[Front Side]:
This Greek Revival house was built ca. 1857 for Benjamin Dudley Culp (1821-1885) and his wife Cornelia Meng Culp (1830-1888). Culp, a Union merchant, owned stores on Main Street with partners J.T. Hill and H.L. Goss from . . . — — Map (db m13542) HM
Marker Front:
This parish was established in 1855 with the Rev. John DeWitt McCollough (1822-1902) as its first rector. This Gothic Revival church, consecrated in 1859 and called “probably the most exquisite gem of a Church in our . . . — — Map (db m30429) HM
On Cross Keys Highway (State Highway 49) 0.5 miles west of Riley Road, on the right when traveling west.
Fair Forest Plantation
Fair Forest, named for nearby Fair Forest Creek, was the plantation of Col. Thomas Fletchall (d.1789), prominent militia officer before the Revolution and Loyalist during it. Captured in 1775 and briefly jailed, Fletchall . . . — — Map (db m13394) HM
On Jonesville Highway, on the right when traveling south.
Led by Philip Mulkey, thirteen converts of the Great Awakening movement traveled from N.C. to S.C. in 1759, settled on the Broad River, and organized a Baptist congregation, the oldest in the upcountry. Three years later, they moved to what is . . . — — Map (db m13442) HM
On Cross Keys Highway (State Highway 49) at Police Club Road, on the left when traveling east on Cross Keys Highway.
1.5 miles SW stood the original Fairforest Baptist Church. The members, led by the Reverend Philip Mulkey, came from North Carolina to Broad River about 1759. In 1762, the church moved to Fairforest where, as the first Baptist church in the up . . . — — Map (db m13393) HM
During two separate terms as a member of the South Carolina State Highways and Public Transportation Commission Representing the 16th Highway District, 1975 ~ 1979 and 1983 ~ 1987, and as Chairman of the Commission 1978 ~ 1979, Mr. Fendley rendered . . . — — Map (db m54562) HM
On Galilee Church Road, on the left when traveling east.
Ancestral Cemetery of
the Gist Family
Among those buried here are
the secession Governor of
South Carolina
William H. Gist
Aug. 2, 1805 - Sept. 30, 1874
Mary Rice Gist
His second wife
Also
Col. William M. Gist C.S.A. . . . — — Map (db m13468) HM
On East Main Street, on the right when traveling east.
Jefferson Davis
President of the Confederate
States of America
Dined in this House,
The former home of
Brigadier General
William H. Wallace
April 28, 1865 — — Map (db m13510) HM
On West Main Street (South Carolina Route 49) west of South Herndon Street, on the left when traveling west.
Lynching in America
During the Reconstruction period that followed emancipation in 1865, thousands of Black people were lynched by white people intent on maintaining racial hierarchy. Federal officials ended Reconstruction in 1877 when they . . . — — Map (db m196451) HM
On Whitmire Highway (U.S. 176) north of Beatty's Bridge Road.
One mile east of this point, built by the pioneers of
Union County, was one of the several stockades used as refuges during the Cherokee War, 1759-1761. It was probably named for James Otterson, an early settler on Tyger River. — — Map (db m11110) HM
On Tinker Creek Road at Mattie Drive, on the right when traveling east on Tinker Creek Road.
(Front)
Poplar Grove School opened in 1927 as a four-classroom school for African American students in Union Co. An extra classroom was added in 1941. In the mid-1960s the original four classrooms were removed and the remaining large . . . — — Map (db m159621) HM
On North Pinckney Street, on the right when traveling north.
[Front]:
This cemetery, the oldest in Union, was established ca. 1817 and sometimes called the "village cemetery." In 1818 a Presbyterian "union" church used by other denominations as well moved here from a 1783 site about 2 mi. E. . . . — — Map (db m81836) HM
On West Main Street (South Carolina Route 49) west of South Herndon Street, on the left when traveling west.
Reconstruction Era Lynchings in Union County
After the Civil War, Black Americans were emancipated after more than two centuries of chattel slavery. Formerly enslaved people purchased land, built churches and schools, and eligible Black men . . . — — Map (db m196452) HM
On Sardis Road, on the right when traveling north.
Erected in 1828-32 by William Henry Gist (1807-1874), lawyer, planter, legislator, and Secessionist Governor of South Carolina, Rose Hill was named for its landscaped rose garden. Its fanlights, carved doors and spiral staircases are noteworthy. The . . . — — Map (db m13498) HM
On Sims Drive (Highway S-44-28) at Rifle Range Road, on the left when traveling east on Sims Drive.
(Front)
Sims High School, located here from 1956 to 1970, replaced a 1927 school on Union Boulevard, which in 1929 had become the first state-accredited high school for African-American students in the upstate. It was named for Rev. A.A. . . . — — Map (db m159618) HM
Sims High School stood here from 1927 until the early 1970's and was the first black high school in Union County. It was named for its founder, Rev. A. A. Sims (1872-1965), who was its first principal 1927-1951. It included grades 6-11 until 1949 . . . — — Map (db m19868) HM
On State Highway 49 at Paula Circle, on the left when traveling west on State Highway 49.
Side A A "union" church, one founded as a Presbyterian congregation but also used by other denominations, stood here from ca. 1783 to ca. 1819. The church was founded ca. 1765 at Brown's Creek, 2 or 3 mi. NE. It met there in two successive log . . . — — Map (db m13541) HM
On North Church Street, 0.1 miles north of East Main Street (State Highway 49), on the left when traveling north.
(Front)
This was the home of Thomas N. Dawkins (1807-1870) and his second wife Mary Poulton Dawkins (1820-1906). Dawkins, a lawyer, state representative, and judge, married Poulton, a native of London, in 1845. They named this house . . . — — Map (db m159615) HM
Marker Front:
Union Community Hospital served the black community and nearby areas from 1932 to 1975. Built as a house ca. 1915, it was converted into a hospital by Dr. L. W. Long in 1932 with the support of several local churches. The . . . — — Map (db m219127) HM
[East Side]:
In Memory of the
Confederate Soldiers
of Union County,
South Carolina.
[North Side]:
Truth, courage,
and patriotism
endure forever.
[South Side]:
These were men who gave
their live and . . . — — Map (db m13536) HM
On Main Street (Route 49) at Enterprise Street on Main Street.
[Front]:
The S. C. Board of Public Works had at least fourteen public buildings under contract in 1822-23, when Robert Mills, Acting Commissioner of the board, rejected a partially built jail of inferior brick before proceeding with this . . . — — Map (db m11109) HM
On West Main Street (State Highway 49) just east of South Enterprise Street, on the right when traveling west.
In 1871, one of the worst waves of white supremacist violence in S.C. history unfolded in Union County. During two raids in Jan. and Feb. of that year, twelve Black men were forcibly taken from this jail by the Ku Klux Klan while awaiting trial. . . . — — Map (db m196465) HM
In memory
of those in
Union County who
gave their lives
in defense of
our country during
World War I
World War II
Korean Conflict
Vietnam War. — — Map (db m13533) WM
North Face
Dedicated to those who served on our United States Navy West Face Dedicated to those who served on our United States Air Force South Face Dedicated to those who served on our United States Marines East . . . — — Map (db m55704) HM
On North Enterprise Street at West Academy Street, on the right when traveling north on North Enterprise Street.
This monument is dedicated to the many generations of employees of Union Mill. This mill provided a livelihood for many families and contributed greatly to the growth of Union County for over 100 years. During the height of the textile revolution, . . . — — Map (db m13544) HM