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Page 10 of 11 — Showing results 91 to 100 of 109
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7KJ_hovie-alexander-nealy_Pickens-SC.html
Pickens Police Chief40 YearsFaithful to the CommunityHe Loved
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7KI_thomas-joab-mauldin_Pickens-SC.html
In MemoriamThomas Jacob Mauldin1870-1931First Judge 18th JudicialCircuit of S.C. 1914-1981.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7KE_charles-ladd-cureton_Pickens-SC.html
ServedPickens Mayor 14 YearsS.C. House of RepresentativesS.C. Highway Commissioner13th Dist. 10 YearsWorked for Pickens CountyProgress
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7KC_in-honor-of-elinor-knight_Pickens-SC.html
Musician, Teacher, Civic leader. Her efforts on behalf of City Beautification have been an inspiration. Her leadership had made this memorial park possible.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7K9_pumpkintown_Pickens-SC.html
This community, settled before 1800, was named "Pumpkin Town" by an anonymous early traveler awed by the sight of the Oolenoy Valley covered with huge yellow pumpkins. It and Pickens Court House (Old Pickens) were the only two towns in present-day…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM7K5_oolenoy-baptist-church_Pickens-SC.html
[Front]: This church, named for the Cherokee chief, Woolenoy - the spelling was changed to Oolenoy in 1827 - was organized in 1795 by Rev. John Chastain, who became its first minister. By 1797, with 50 members, it was admitted to the Bethel Baptis…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM64Z_hopewell-hopewell-indian-treaties_Clemson-SC.html
HopewellHopewell was the family home of General Andrew Pickens, Revolutionary War hero and Indian Commissioner, and his wife, Rebecca Calhoun Pickens. Their son, Andrew Pickens, S.C. Governor, 1816-1818, later owned Hopewell, and it was the childh…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM64L_clemson-university_Clemson-SC.html
[Front]:Clemson University was founded in 1889 as the Clemson Agricultural College of S.C., with its origins in the Morrill Land Grant Act of 1862 creating public land-grant colleges. It was established by a bequest from Thomas Green Clemson (1807…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM64I_asbury-f-lever_Clemson-SC.html
Asbury Francis Lever served in Congress, 1901-1919. On May 8, 1914, the Smith-Lever Act, introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives by Lever, was signed into law, providing for cooperative agricultural extension services to be administered by…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM64G_fort-hill-plantation-office_Clemson-SC.html
John C. Calhoun's Plantation Office was his private sanctuary and housed both his study and library during his twenty-five year residency at Fort Hill. In this building Calhoun developed and set forth his most historically significant constitution…
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