Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Socastee is an Indigenous American name referred to as "Sawkastee" in a 1711 land grant to Percival Pawley. A skirmish between small forces of American and British troops occurred near Socastee Creek in 1781. By the 1870s, the Socastee community was a significant center for the production and distribution of naval stores such as turpentine and tar.
At Socastee, the road followed an east–west direction along the current route of SC 707 through Socastee, continuing through the area that is currently the Myrtle Beach International Airport, and ending near downtown Myrtle Beach on the road that is now Broadway Street. A more direct and wider route running diagonally between Conway and ...
SC 544 (Dick Pond Road) to SC 31 – Socastee, Conway, Surfside Beach: Nelson Jackson Memorial Interchange: Socastee–Myrtle Beach line: 194.465: 312.961: SC 707 south (Socastee Boulevard) / Farrow Parkway south – Socastee, Horry-Georgetown Technical College Grand Strand Campus: Northern terminus of SC 707 and Farrow Parkway; interchange ...
The route first starts at the interchange with S.C. 707 with a trumpet interchange where it then heads northwest before curving northeast. The route then makes an interchange at S.C. 544 near Socastee where it continues on for about four miles before reaching the interchange with U.S. Route 501 which S.C. 31 has an unusual hybrid interchange with US 501, similar to a cloverstack, with elements ...
In the late 1970s, the route that SC 707 currently takes was previously signed as SC 544 from Murrells Inlet to the current intersection of Dick Pond Road in Socastee. At that time, SC 707 began at Socastee, followed Socastee Boulevard and parts of the then-unbuilt US 17 bypass north of the Myrtle Beach International Airport before terminating ...
Both directions intersect SR 304 (Seymour Drive). When Main Street veers northeast as two-way SR 129, ... SC 544 – Socastee, Surfside Beach, Garden City, ...
SC 707 near Socastee: SC 9 in Little River: c. 2002: current Third form; projected to become part of I-74: SC 32 — — SC 30 near Henderson: SC 6 near Jacksonboro: 1922: c. 1925: SC 32 — — SC 30 in Gardens Corner: SC 6 in Jacksonboro: c. 1926: 1951 SC 33: 19.360: 31.157
SC 38 was one of the first highways in the South Carolina state system, originally running from Myrtle Beach through Socastee and Conway to Marion and Latta. The section east of Conway became US 117 in 1932 and later SC 544, SC 707, and S-28-15.