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Fort Mill Downtown Historic District: Fort Mill Downtown Historic District: June 11, 1992 : Main St. from Confederate Park east to 233 Main: Fort Mill: 9: Hart House: Hart House: December 2, 1977 : 220 E. Liberty St.
Fort Mill Downtown Historic District is a national historic district located at Fort Mill, York County, South Carolina. It encompasses 16 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, 1 contributing structure, and 4 contributing objects in the central business district of Fort Mill. The buildings are predominantly one and two-story masonry ...
Interstate 77 passes through the western portions of the town, and exit 85 is signed "South Carolina Highway 160/Fort Mill." SC 160 is the main east–west street in Fort Mill. The town of Fort Mill held a final public hearing in October 2008 on a proposed annexation that doubled the town's physical size. [15] Fort Mill has three golf courses.
website, military history of South Carolina South Carolina Cotton Museum: Bishopville: Lee: Pee Dee: Industry: website, cotton uses, farming and processing South Carolina Governor's Mansion: Columbia: Richland: Midlands: Historic house: Mid 19th-century mansion South Carolina Law Enforcement Officers Hall of Fame: Columbia: Richland: Midlands ...
Mills House is a historic home located at Fort Mill, York County, South Carolina. It was built in 1906, and is a two-story, frame dwelling in the Classical Revival style with a slate hipped roof. The front façade features a central lower porch topped by an upper tier and flanked by side porches.
The armory was built in 1938 with funds provided by the Works Progress Administration.The brick building consists of a central block with tall vertical windows, two flanking sections, and two end sections.
The second floor on natural history is notable for its recreation of a 3.6-million-year-old megalodon, named Finn, suspended mid-air just around a corner, and for a life-size Columbian mammoth (which was once native to SC). The Museum's first natural history curator was Rudy Mancke, who went on to produce a national program on South Carolina ...
The house was originally constructed between 1790 and 1806 by John Springs III and his wife first occupied the house. At one time, the plantation was 3,200 acres (1,300 ha). In the 1850s, the house was extensively remodeled by Andrew Baxter Springs and his architect, Jacob Graves of Columbia.