On County Line Road (State Highway 41) 0.5 miles north of State Highway 51, on the left when traveling north.
[Front]:
One of the earliest Dissenter congregations in South Carolina north of the Santee River was located about two miles south of here. Its church building had been completed by 1727 when the Rev. Thomas Morritt, Episcopal minister . . . — — Map (db m27709) HM
On Thurgood Marshall Highway (State Highway 527) at County Line Road (State Highway 41) on Thurgood Marshall Highway.
Early Settlers
Among the first settlers of Williamsburg County, members of the Witherspoon family sailed from Belfast to Charleston in 1734, arriving about December 1. With a year's provisions, they embarked on an open-boat voyage. Traveling . . . — — Map (db m28118) HM
On Muddy Creek Road at Pope Road, on the left when traveling north on Muddy Creek Road.
This church is said to be the oldest Methodist congregation in present Williamsburg County. It was established prior to 1822 when Samuel Heaselden, in his will, reserved two acres of land for the congregation; in 1837, his heirs deeded this land . . . — — Map (db m27328) HM
On Henry Road (State Highway 512) east of Ivey Road (County Route 45-121), on the left when traveling east.
Active in the Red Shirt campaign which resulted in Gen. Wade Hampton’s election as SC governor, 1876, Chandler later served as Supervisor of Williamsburg County. He was twice elected to the SC House and was known as “an honest and manly . . . — — Map (db m27900) HM
On County Line Road (State Highway 51) 1.5 miles north of Browns Ferry Road, on the left when traveling north.
Black Mingo – Willtown
By 1760, Charles Woodmason had established a store near here, following a 1745 Act of the General Assembly that provided for clearing of the watercourses at the head of Black Mingo Creek. Soon thereafter, schooners . . . — — Map (db m17005) HM