Georgetown South Carolina
Looking for a new home in
town of
Georgetown South Carolina
area?
Georgetown
County is a setting of stunning natural beauty and
historical significance, with superb cultural and
recreational amenities. And with
Myrtle Beach and
Charleston nearby, you're at the center of the
Tidelands, with an outstanding business environment.
Premiere Georgetown SC Real
Estate Agents
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Specializing in investment opportunities,
preconstruction, new and old built homes, onsite
sales. Harry C.
Stokes REALTOR
Cell: 843 997-0104 Office (843)903-4278
www.hartrealtyonline.com
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Airports, universities, world class
shopping and golf, and an incomparable downtown historic
district are all easily accessible to you and your
family. And did we mention the weather is delightful?
You can enjoy outdoor recreation four seasons of the
year.
Georgetown is a city originally laid out in 1729 with
over 50 historic sites. Add the great Winyah Bay, the
Sampit, Black and Pee Dee Rivers, the rich Gullah
influences, and unparalleled residential coastal living
- they all combine to make this an unbeatable place to
live and work.
You'll enjoy one-of-a-kind attractions like Hobcaw
Barony and Brookgreen Gardens, excellent medical care
facilities, gracious coastal and inland residential
communities, and lively arts and cultural events held
throughout the year. Events such as the music festival
in Andrews (a top 20 event of the Southeast) and the Art
Festival at Atalaya are just a few of the things that
ensure your recreational calendar will always be full.
National Geographic (recently) named Georgetown
County one of the nation's top 10 places for summer
adventure. Now authors Gerald Sweitzer and Kathy Fields
have selected Georgetown as one of their "50 Best Small
Southern Towns." In their book by the same name, the
authors say the selection process was based on criteria
such as economic viability, cultural scene, recreational
attractions, health care and adult educational
opportunities. "These communities are not only charming
and secure, but are also compatible with modern
lifestyles," states a news release from Peachtree
Publishers.
The Tidelands of Georgetown County, South Carolina
have hosted inhabitants for the past 50,000 years.
Imagine the same beaches, swamps, salt marshes and
forest land that we have today undisturbed by roadway
and highrises.
The Tidelands of Georgetown offer the opportunity to
travel down a trail of history that weaves its magic
through marshes, beaches, ports of call and a way of
life far too tranquil (yet turbulent) to be forgotten.
Make a relaxing escape browsing through stories of rice
and indigo, time and tides, fact and fancy. Comb our
beaches, sail our waters, meander on our harborwalk and
explore our plantations. Come savor the local cuisine
and peruse our local artisans wares. Stay and indulge
yourself in our southern hospitality
The earliest inhabitants of The Tidelands.. the "Native
American", lived in harmony with nature. They fished
from the ocean and dark water rivers, hunted game in the
thick forest-land, and subsisted on the abundant berries
and fruits that they could find. A nomadic people, they
lived in extended family groups, with sing-song names
like Pee Dee (coming and going), Wee Nee (black water or
dark water people) Waccamaw, Winyah, and Santee.
The first Europeans came in 1526; under the Spanish
leadership of Lucas Vesquez de Ayllon, who settled on
the banks of the Winyah Bay. They failed as farmers. The
Spaniards then built a vessel from the towering cypress
and oak trees lining the swamp, and sailed off to the
Spice Islands of the Caribbean, where there was a ready
market for their slaves. They left behind their dream of
gold and riches yet to be found. By the mid-1600's,
English and French outposts sprang up, and trade was
established with the natives. The rivers served as
highways, graced with live oaks dripping with moss, and
magnolias with fragrant white blossoms. Although
beautiful, the swamps and rivers were alive with
alligators, poisonous snakes, mosquitoes, and bordered
with an impregnable growth of vines and cane. These
tidelands were eventually tamed, and the native
Americans were conquered. They vanished from the area,
leaving behind only legends, as well as a few artifacts
of pottery, arrow points and crude tools made from
seashells.
By 1729, Georgetown was a busy seaport, with cargo ever
flowing down-river on barges and flats. Imports and
exports created wealth beyond imagination. The citizens
of the Georgetown District petitioned the King of
England to have a port, which was officially granted in
1732 with the arrival of the King's "Collector of
Customs". The slow and heavily ladened merchant ships
were easy pickings for pirates, who darted out from the
labyrinth of hidden bays in the barrier islands to
plunder without respect for life. Some of the most
famous pirates in history lurked offshore....
"Blackbeard", "Caesar", and "Red Anny", to name a few.
At one point, over 2,000 pirates were flying the "Jolly
Roger" up and down the coast. Blood thirsty and
ruthless, most died as they had lived...violently. But
what about the booty they buried and covered with human
skulls and crossed bones? Some say it's still around the
area, waiting to be found.
A new chapter in the history of Georgetown County was
about to unfold. A grand plantation style of life that
had it roots in the forbidding swamps and pineywood
forests.
"Naval Stores" were the primary source of local business
for many years. As the full moon of change rose over the
felled pines that profited pitch, turpentine, rosin and
timber for shipbuilding, new and richer uses of the land
were coming into existence. The "War of Jenkins Ear", a
war of vanity between England and the French, Portuguese
and Spanish traders left England without a source of the
coveted Royal Blue Indigo dye. As the indigo plant grew
wild all along the coastal plains, it was a natural
transition for the cleared land to be used for
cultivating indigo. Indigo is the rarest of dyes,
because blue is the most difficult color to produce in a
dye. Georgetown County indigo came in three colors: fine
copper, purple and fine flora. Trade was brisk, and
created fortunes that rivaled the wealth of the royalty
of Europe. An aristocratic society of plantation owners
was established, and they formed the "Winyah Indigo
Society". Land was donated and a grand hall was built
with rich red brick, which many year later became the
home of the area's first free school. It still stands
today in the city of Georgetown as a monument to our
heritage.
However, by the end of the 18th century, great
quantities of the dye were being produced in India and
the East Indies, glutting the market. As the price fell,
Georgetown planters began turning to rice cultivation,
which was in worldwide demand. It was indigo, however,
that gave Georgetown County its first real economic
wealth, creating an aristocratic society of planters, as
well as aiding in the area's ability to sever ties with
England due to its financial independence.
Wild, perennial indigo plants still bloom in the spring
along the roadsides of Georgetown County 200 years after
the industry was abandoned.
By the middle of the 18th century, Georgetown County was
a dominant indigo and rice planting region, with a
well-developed class of prominent and influential
planter families. They prided themselves in being highly
literate and kept up with current events. They began to
resent the burden of taxation placed on their imports
and exports by England. One of the area's most vocal and
powerful planters was Thomas Lynch, Jr., who was one of
the original signers of the Declaration of Independence.
He built his home on the banks of the Santee river, and
named it Hopsewee (combining the names of the Hop and
See Wee tribes)
Another area planter, Christopher Gadsden of Beneventum
plantation is remembered for the flag he designed:
"Don't Tread on Me!"
As the Revolutionary War began, local planter Francis
Marion, the legendary "Swamp Fox", along with a ragged
band of followers, almost single-handedly defeated the
British in this area.
In 1791, a victorious George Washington, on his southern
tour, recognized these heroes from the steps of the
Masonic Lodge in Georgetown.
By the late 1700's , the ringing of axes must have been
a constant sound through the cypress swamps. Over 40,000
acres were cleared, some 780 miles of canals were dug,
and the second largest rice culture the world has ever
known was established. A long golden grain called "Waccamaw
Gold", sprouted in the rich, loamy soil, and ushered in
perhaps the grandest, most opulent, and yet the most
sorrowful chapter of Georgetown County's history. It
would create an empire that would transform the area
into one of the wealthiest and most influential regions
in the nation.
Due to unique network of tide-controlled fresh water
rivers, and rich, loamy, marshy areas, the planting of
rice in this area was ideal. The original rice seeds
were brought in from Madagascar to the port of
Charleston around 1680. Through the years, the planting
and growing of rice was experimented with and perfected,
until by the 19th century, an average of 32,000,000
bushels of rice was being exported from this region,
with the best year producing 56,000,000 bushels. Grocers
in England praised the singular quality of "Carolina
Gold" rice above all other rice. A popular book on home
etiquette published in London in 1776, was adamant about
"procuring only Waccamaw Gold from the Carolina", when
serving rice. Rice even assumed the importance of money,
being accepted as payment for taxes. For over a century
a single agricultural crop sustained the economy of
Georgetown.
As the county prospered, gracious living became the
status quo. Elegant plantation mansions with formal tea
gardens, sprawling lawns, corridors of live oak called "allees",
all were hallmarks of southern aristocracy. Planter
families were well-traveled and educated, they raised
thoroughbred horses and drank fine European wines.
The Pawleys Island and Litchfield Beaches became in a
real sense, the first resort area in America. Some say
that since they were separated from the mainland by
large salt marshes, malaria-bearing mosquitoes could not
fly across them. Pawleys Island in particular became a
favorite refuge of the wealthy planter families, some of
whose homes are still standing today.
They also built lavish homes in Charleston, and stayed
there during the "social season" of February, which was
after the crops were harvested. All the romantic images
so often associated with the "Old South" and "Gone With
The Wind", grew out of the period.
Unfortunately, all this was paid for with a high human
price, an accepted system of slavery. The cultivation of
rice required an extraordinary amount of hard human
labor, as did the upkeep of the plantation house and
grounds. Some of the largest slave-holding plantations
in the South were right here along the Waccamaw River,
averaging between 200 to 500 slaves each. The largest
plantation in the area had 1,121 slaves.
With the Emancipation Proclamation and the ending of the
Civil War, slavery was abolished. For a few years, rice
planters struggled to keep their industry alive, but
mother nature said NO! Great storms, like the Hurricanes
of 1893, 1903, 1906, 1910 and 1911 devastated the
fields, and there was not the labor to rebuild. The last
commercial rice harvest in Georgetown County was in
1919. The golden era of the rice empire was finally
dead, giving way to reconstruction and the 20th century.
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
The early part of this century saw this area flourish as
a hunting preserve for the rich and powerful: from
presidents and politicians, to industrialist and movie
stars. Hobcaw Barony became such a retreat, created by
native son Bernard Baruch, who enjoyed the visits of
F.D.R., Churchill, Vanderbilt, DuPont, and others.
As the pendulum of time swung from the 19th to the 20th
century, we found an untapped wealth in the forest lands
that were linked to the port city and the world by the
area's greatest resource-water.
It was a major undertaking to move millions of tons of
rock to the two barrier islands at the entrance to the
harbor and build "jetties" of over 11,000 feet on the
north and 21, 000 feet on the south entrance of the bay,
with steam and sail power. A dredge was built to
maintain a channel and, coupled with the railway and the
river system, the lumber business flourished. Mills
sprang up almost overnight. The Atlantic Coast Lumber
Company was the largest in the world with its 5,000,000
board foot dock and shed. Turpentine, pine rosin,
shingles, furniture - but none as unusual as the DuPont
wood alcohol and dynamite mill.
Over at Hobcaw Barony, the decision was made not to
route the newly-conceived coastal highway down the bay
and on to Charleston, but to go through the town of
Georgetown. With the completion of the Lafayette Bridge,
the final link from Maine to Miami put Georgetown County
in the spotlight. The Intracoastal Waterway utilized the
mighty Waccamaw River and Winyah Bay.
Imagine coming to the area in a coach with all your
belongings and provisions for the summer, traveling a
two-lane rut and having the Atlantic Ocean at your front
door with a salt creek and forest out back. The
pilgrimage that started with the rice planters' families
to the isolated summer retreats at Pawleys Island,
Litchfield and Murrells Inlet by ferrying the river or
by horse and carriage could be accomplished in one day
by automobile.
Coming into
Murrells Inlet, the visitor found a rambling
village with sections named Sunnyside, Cedar Hill and a
small island called Drunken Jack's, plus a lodge or two
to feed the fishermen and the few vacationing families,
and a small fishing fleet. Who would have dreamed that
it would grow into the Seafood Capital that it is today?
Crab boys and creek boys are a thing of the past, but
you can still catch your own fish and shrimp, just be
careful walking in the sticky goo. Coming south at one
of the largest Plantations in the world, the Huntingtons
built a Morrish-style "Castle by the Sea" and developed
a natural wonderland that we know as Brookgreen Gardens.
With the construction of Atalaya and the road from the
river to the ocean, they became the largest employer on
the "Neck" in the '30s. Magnolia Beach, swept clean in
the Great Storm (the hurricane of 1893) , has become a
model state park with 'gators and eagles, and the castle
still stands for you to view.
The Kings Highway followed the river, linking together
the plantations in All Saints Parish with carriage roads
down the allees of oaks to their mansions. Today,
redwing blackbirds nest in the march grasses and osprey
look down from their massive nests in the tops of
towering cypress to survey the golf courses that meander
through the old live oaks, azaleas and magnolias.
The carriage roads were paved and led you over the beach
at Litchfield where the Hot & Hot Fish Club used to
meet. Industries sprouted beneath the oaks from sail
cordage and oak sticks. They also made hot sauce from
the fields of peppers and caviar from the sturgeon from
the rivers.
There was a railroad at Pawleys that ran four miles to
the river and a ferry down the peaceful river to
Georgetown. With the highway, there's 12 miles of
uninterrupted forest and wildflowers that passes by the
Hobcaw Barony, where Presidents enjoyed solitude and
nature. There are 17,500 acres of forest and wetlands
set aside from intrusion for all to enjoy.
The panorama from the high bridge coming into Georgetown
leaves little to the imagination as to why Georgetown
County is the Tidelands. Rivers flow gently to fill the
blue-green Atlantic Ocean eleven miles away. Gracious
townhouses and churches lie hidden in the historic
district, with a shrimp boat or two, and the oldest
fish-house in the state on the banks of the Sampit
River.
Down the bay is Battery White, build for the defense of
the port during the Civil War and surrounded by Belle
Isle Plantation gardens - a national historic landmark.
In the 1930s, it was announced that the largest paper
mill in the world was to be built in Georgetown and
today they are responsible for the majority of our
agricultural forest land, raising a renewable resource.
One the banks of the Santee River where the rockfish
still run, Hopsewee Plantation House still stands in all
her glory with a real southern welcome for all who wish
to visit.
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