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State flag of South Carolina Location of South Carolina in the U.S. map The following is a list of prominent people who were born in the U.S. state of South Carolina, lived in South Carolina, or for whom South Carolina is a significant part of their identity. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with ...
Pages in category "People from Aynor, South Carolina" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. F.
Jesse F. Carter: 1927: 1943 - A. Lee Chandler: 1984: 1994: Became chief justice in 1994 Thomas P. Cothran: ... Chief Justices of the State of South Carolina, 1698-2000
Aynor is a small town in Horry County, South Carolina, United States, south of Galivants Ferry. The population was 560 at the 2010 census [6] and estimated in 2018 to be 934. [7] Aynor High School consistently ranks as one of the best schools in Horry County and South Carolina. [8] but now its 1,077 residents 2025
The county seat is also one of South Carolina’s oldest communities, tracing its origins back to 1732 when it was called Kingston. Once Horry County was established in 1801, locals took to ...
Jesse Edison Hines was born in Florence, South Carolina on May 23, 1933. He graduated from South Carolina State University in 1955 and served in Korea in the US Army before receiving an honorary discharge. Hines returned to South Carolina State, earning a master's degree in education in 1967. [1]
Lily Strickland was born on January 28, 1884, in Anderson, South Carolina. Her father was Charlton Hines Strickland and her mother was Teresa Hammond Reed. [1] When her father died, the family moved into the home of her grandparents, Judge and Mr. J. Pinckney Reed. Strickland began studying piano at age six and began composing in her teens.
At that time, the county name was Kingston County and the county seat was Conwayboro. The ferry crossing was again mentioned in the 1795 South Carolina Acts relating to Roads, Bridges, and Ferries, with "Elvise's Landing" being vested with Richard Gallivant and the fees paid in U.S. dollars.