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Ware Shoals is a town in Abbeville, Greenwood, and Laurens counties in the U.S. state of South Carolina, along the Saluda River. [5] At the 2020 census , the population was 1,701. The Greenwood County portion of Ware Shoals is part of the Greenwood Micropolitan Statistical Area , while the Laurens County portion is part of the Greenville ...
Laurens County was formed on March 12, 1785. [4] It was named after Henry Laurens, the fifth president of the Continental Congress.. One of nine modern counties of the Colonial Ninety-Six District, Laurens County hosted more "official" (i.e. officially recognized and contemporaneously documented by competent governments) battles than did half of the original colonies.
Columbia, which has one of the state’s largest water systems, says it faces potentially millions of dollars in annual costs to clean up its water, in addition to the estimated $150 million to ...
US 76 in Honea Path, South Carolina; Laurens County/Abbeville County/Greenwood County Erwin Mill Road; Maddox Bridge Road; SC 252 (Old Bridge) in Ware Shoals, South Carolina; East Main Street in Ware Shoals; US 25 in Ware Shoals; Lake Greenwood. Old Laurens-Greenwood Highway; Greenwood Highway (SC 72/US 221) in Lake Shores, South Carolina
Columbia water bills have been slowly but steadily on the rise for a number of years, largely due to long-delayed maintenance and improvements. Here’s how much more you could be paying in the ...
Richard B. Russell Dam is a concrete-gravity and embankment dam located on the Savannah River at the border of South Carolina and Georgia, creating Richard B. Russell Lake. The dam was built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers between 1974 and 1985 for the purposes of flood control , hydroelectricity , recreation , additional stream flow ...
O'Dell was the son of William B. and Sara Francis O'Dell and was born in Ware Shoals, South Carolina.O'Dell earned a bachelor's degree from The Citadel in 1960. He and his wife Aedra Gayle Tisdale are the parents of two children, William B. O'Dell and Patricia Michelle Foster.
Lead is a toxin that cities across the country are fighting to keep out of drinking water. Recent studies in the Columbia area offer encouraging findings.