South Carolina: Greenville County Historic Preservation Commission
Showing results 1 to 6 of 6
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM5B9_cherokee-boundary-1767_Greer-SC.html
[Front]:In 1766-67 S.C. & N.C. negotiated with the Cherokee to establish a boundary between Indian land to the west and new settlement to the east. This north-south line ran past this point to N.C. and on to Va. In S.C. it ran north from near present-day Ho…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM5O8_tullyton_Fountain-Inn-SC.html
This house was built by T.C. Booling c. 1840 near the old indian boundary. C.B. Stewart minister of nearby Fairview Presbyterian Church lived here 1859-1890.
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMBTP_tigerville_Taylors-SC.html
[Front]:Tigerville got its name from early settlers who settled here shortly after the Revolution. They called bobcats they saw here "tygers," and named the nearby Tyger River, Head of Tyger Baptist Church, later Tyger Baptist Church, was founded about 1800…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMX45_cherokee-boundary-1767_Fountain-Inn-SC.html
[Front]:In 1766-67 S.C. & N.C. negotiated with the Cherokee to establish a boundary between Indian land to the west and new settlement to the east. This north-south line ran past this point to N.C. and on to Va. In S.C. it ran north from near present-day Ho…
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HMY3O_fountain-inn-rosenwald-school_Fountain-Inn-SC.html
[Front]:The Fountain Inn Rosenwald School, also known as the Fountain Inn Colored School, was a complex of several buildings built here from 1928 to 1942. The first school, a frame seven-room elementary school for grades 1-7, was a Rosenwald school, one of …
historicalmarkerproject.com/markers/HM14ZN_mauldin_Mauldin-SC.html
FrontThis area was settled soon after the Revolution, and a community grew up here on the road from Greenville to Laurens. It was later known as Butler's Crossroads for Willis W. Butler, who acquired a tract including the intersection of the Laurens and Ree…