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This is a list of plantations and/or plantation houses in the U.S. state of South Carolina that are National Historic Landmarks, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, listed on a heritage register, or are otherwise significant for their history, association with significant events or people, or their architecture and design.
September 5 – A gasoline pipeline ruptured and ignited at a Plantation Pipeline Terminal in Bremen, Georgia. For a time, there were fears the fire might spread to nearby fuel storage tanks, but the fire was limited to the pipeline. [43] September 26 A 10 inch crude oil pipeline ruptured and burned, next to pipeline terminal, in Midland, Texas ...
Magnolia Plantation and Gardens (Charleston, South Carolina) Mansfield Plantation; Medway (Mount Holly, South Carolina) Middleburg Plantation; Middleton Place; Milldam Rice Mill and Rice Barn; Mulberry Plantation (Moncks Corner, South Carolina) Mulberry Plantation (Kershaw County, South Carolina)
The Otranto Plantation Indigo Vats were relocated by the Verona Chemical Company, later Mobay Corporation, from Otranto Plantation to their present site in 1979 to save them from demolition. They are the only such structures know to be in existence in South Carolina. [2] [3] It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. [1]
Danzas was founded in 1815 and was originally based in Saint-Louis, Alsace, France. [3] Louis Danzas fought at Waterloo for Napoleon. After that battle, he joined a transport company owned by Michel l'Eveque and by 1840 became joint owner. The company, Danzas, and l'Eveque, obtained a mail delivery franchise from Le Havre to New York City in ...
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More than 236,000 acres of rice fields spanning 160 miles once covered coastal South Carolina, according to a recent mapping project that used modern tools to document the massive footprint of the ...
Ashtabula is a plantation house at 2725 Old Greenville Highway near Pendleton in Anderson County, South Carolina, USA. It has been also known as the Gibbes-Broyles-Latta-Pelzer House or some combination of one or more of these names. [2] It was named in the National Register of Historic Places as a historic district on March 23, 1972.