Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Black River is a 151-mile-long (243 km) [1] blackwater river in South Carolina in the United States. It courses through Lee, Sumter, Clarendon, and Williamsburg counties before merging with the Great Pee Dee River in Georgetown County. The river was called the Wee Nee by the Native Americans who once inhabited the area. [2]
Lynches River; May River; Morgan River (SC) New River; Oolenoy River; Okatee River; Old Dead River (Marlboro County) Old Dead River (Richland County, Congaree National Park) Pacolet River (incl. North, South, and Lawson's Fork Creek) Pocotaligo River (Black River tributary) Pocotaligo River (Broad River tributary) Reedy River; Rocky River ...
The Williamsburg County Hometown Chamber Quality of Place Committee was able to get the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources to include a 75-mile stretch of the Black River in the Scenic River Program in 2001. The Black River is one South Carolina's longest rivers and was the seventh addition to the Scenic Rivers. [14] The river is ...
The citation on historical markers is given in the reference. The location listed is the nearest community to the site. More precise locations are given in the reference. These listings illustrate some of the history and contributions of African Americans in South Carolina.
The Little Pee Dee River is threatened by a proposed freeway from Interstate 95 to Myrtle Beach, a new report says Planned SC highway imperils scenic, black water river, national report says Skip ...
Andrew Pickens Scenic Parkway: SC 11 [5] Bohicket Road: Bohicket Road [6] Cowpens National Battlefield: SC 110 [7] Falling Waters: SC 107 [8] Fort Johnson Road: Fort Johnson Road [9] Hilton Head Highway: US 278 [10] James Edwin McTeer Bridge & the Causeways: US 21 / SC 802 [11] Long Point Road: Long Point Road [12] Mathis Ferry Road: Mathis ...
The current SC 41 was established in 1938 on a path from Lake View northeast to the North Carolina state line, where it replaced the original SC 94. The next year, a separate portion of the highway was established from the Marion–Dillon county line northward for about 5 miles (8.0 km).
Europeans moved into the Oolenoy River Valley soon after the signing of the Hopewell Treaty, settling at Pumpkintown—named for the unusually large pumpkins grown there. William Sutherland and James Keith operated a wayside lodge for visitors and in 1845, they built the twenty-room Table Rock Hotel, which prospered until the Civil War.