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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMFGH_newington-plantation_Summerville-SC.html
Newington Plantation was established on this site in the 1680s after Daniel Axtell recieved a royal grant of 300 acres. Axtell died shortly after arriving in the colony and his widow Rebecca built a house on the grant by the 1690s. In 1711 Lady Ax…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMFDY_old-white-meeting-house-and-cemetery_Summerville-SC.html
(Text front) This church was established in 1696 by settlers from Dorchester, Mass., for which the town of Dorchester was named. This brick sanctuary, built ca. 1700, was occupied and then burned by British troops in 1781. The church was reorganiz…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMF8U_south-carolina-canal-rail-road-company_St-George-SC.html
Began first successful scheduledsteam railroad service in Americaon December 25, 1830, and by 1833its 136 miles from Charlestonto Hamburg made it the world'slongest railroad. Now a part ofSouthern Railroad System.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMF6A_berkeley-county_Summerville-SC.html
This county was designated a court and land conveyance district in 1682, and an election district in 1683. It was named for two brothers, Lord John and Sir William Berkeley, both Lord Proprietors of Carolina. Over the years, functions of this earl…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMF4Y_parish-church-of-st-george-dorchester_Summerville-SC.html
St. George's, an Anglican parish, was erected in 1717. A brick church 50 ft. long and 30 ft. wide with a chancel 15 by 5 feet, begun in August 1719, was enlarged in the 1730's. The tower was built before 1753 and in 1766 held four bells. Burned by…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMF3F_fort-dorchester_Summerville-SC.html
A brick powder magazine enclosed by a tabby wall eight feet high was built here in 1757. During the Revolution, Dorchester was a strategic point. In 1775 the magazine was fortified and the garrison commanded by Capt. Francis Marion. British troops…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMF1T_the-bell-tower-of-st-georges_Summerville-SC.html
Angry with the Anglican Church, the Puritan Pilgrams left England in 1620. Their descendants, known as Congregationalists, founded Dorchester in the 1690s, only to endure South Carolina's 1706 declaration of Anglicanism as the colony's official ch…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMF0Q_old-dorchester_Summerville-SC.html
Laid out in 1697 as a market town for the Congregationalist colony from Dorchester, Mass., the village contained 116 quarter-acre lots and a town square and commons. An Anglican church was built in 1720, a fair was established in 1723, and a Free …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMEZZ_colonial-dorchester_Summerville-SC.html
Quiet and deserted today, this 'village green' once bustled with colonists buying, selling or trading livestock, supplies, and even slaves. Hoping that economics would spur growth, the 1723 Colonial legislature had decreed that weekly markets woul…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMEZC_dorchester-free-school_Summerville-SC.html
A small brick building once stood here housing the Dorchester Free School. The school offered free education to omly a few poor students. All others paid tuition. Opportunities for white children to learn outside the home or shop was limited. Blac…
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