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On February 17, 2001, the burnt body of 21-year-old Kandee Louise Martin was found inside the trunk of her burned car in Dorchester County, South Carolina. [4]The day before, according to court sources, 20-year-old Marion Bowman Jr. was with his sister when he encountered Martin and her group of friends.
The Charleston, South Carolina, native learned the printing trade at The Charleston Courier and subsequently purchased an interest in The Spartanburg Herald. When his wife died, Sims sold his interest and moved to Orangeburg. In 1878, he purchased The Edisto Clarion, successor to The Tax-Payer, and changed its name again, to The Orangeburg ...
After high school, she married the Bishop Ronald E. Brown of Faith Tabernacle Deliverance Temple in Orangeburg, South Carolina. Together they had a son, Mario Brown, now known as Mario Winans. [2] They later divorced and Brown died in 2019. In June 1978, she married Marvin Winans of the gospel group The Winans. With Marvin, she had one son ...
St. Matthews is a town in Calhoun County, South Carolina, United States. The population was 1,841 at the 2020 census, [2] a decline from 2,021 in 2010. [5] It is the county seat of Calhoun County. [6] St. Matthews is part of the Columbia, South Carolina Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Prior to beginning his tenure in the South Carolina Senate, Hutto served as the Chairman of the Orangeburg County Democratic Party from 1988 to 1994. [8] Jaime Harrison , then a high school student in Orangeburg, credits working with Hutto at this time as part of the reason he got so involved in politics.
William Henry Willimon (born May 15, 1946) is a retired American theologian and bishop in the United Methodist Church who served the North Alabama Conference for eight years.
George Alfred Trenholm was born on February 25, 1807, in Charleston, South Carolina to Elizabeth Irene (de Greffin) Trenholm and her merchant husband, William Trenholm. His maternal grandfather, Comte de Greffin, was a major plantation owner in Saint Domingue (before the slave revolution; it is now Haiti).
Charles "Chuck" McDew (June 23, 1938 – April 3, 2018) was an American lifelong activist for racial equality and a former activist of the Civil Rights Movement. [1] After attending South Carolina State University in Orangeburg, South Carolina, he became the chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1960 to 1963. [2]