Murrells Inlet South Carolina
Looking for a new home in
seaside town of
Murrells Inlet South Carolina
area?
Historic
fishing village of Murrells Inlet, South Carolina,
a quaint, little town. Feel the rush of adrenaline as
you play the perfect golf game on one of our beautiful
courses, soar high into the sky on a parasail ride,
explore the creek in canoes and kayaks or catch a big
flounder on a fishing excursion.
Premiere Murrells
Inlet SC Real
Estate Agents
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Specializing in building relationships with my
clients and giving them the service that they
expect. I search all local listings and find the
homes or businesses that match your criteria
Jill Klunk - All American
Realty
Cell: (843)267-5891 - Office 843-492-4482
www.jillklunkhomes.com |
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Specializing in investment opportunities,
preconstruction,newand old built homes, onsite
sales. Harry C.
Stokes REALTOR
Cell: 843 997-0104 Office (843)903-4278
www.hartrealtyonline.com |
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Specializing in
residential homes, new construction, golf course
properties, oceanfront vacation and investment
properties, and residential building lots in the
greater Myrtle Beach area
Barbara Heller - RE/MAX Town & Country
Cell: 843-995-3684 Office
www.YourMyrtleBeachHomeTeam.com |
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Specializing in
customer service in all Residential, Condo/Townhome
and Beachfront Properties. "Consultations Are
Free, Results Are PRICELESS!"
Doug Procter - Exit Grand
Strand Properties
Cell: (843) 267-2702 Office: (843)
651-0500
www.dougprocter.com |
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From lots and
acreage to investment and residential
properties, I can assist you with all aspects of
the purchase or sale of real estate. Call me and
join my growing list of satisfied clients.
Stephen Ham, REALTOR, Keller Wiliams
Cell: 843-602-6460 Office: 843-443-9400
www.stephenham.com |
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MILLION DOLLAR SERVICE IN ALL
PRICE RANGES. I KNOW the beach. Put my knowledge
and experience of the 'Grand Strand' to work for
you.
Ann Clark, Realtor
Cell: 843-455-7410 Office:843-650-0500
www.mbhometeam.com |
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History of Murrells Inlet began
writing itself long before this area was officially
named Murrells Inlet by the post office in 1913. The
origin of this name remains a mystery with theories
resting in passed-down legends of pirates and fishermen
and incomplete records of landowners, plats and maps.
The pages of Murrells Inlet's past are graced with
footprints of Native American tribes, 16th century
Spanish explorers and English colonists in the 17th
century. In the 1700s and 1800s large land tracts were
cultivated into successful rice plantations. By 1850,
almost 47 million pounds of rice were produced in the
Waccamaw Neck, an area that includes Murrells Inlet.
South Carolina rice planters were far wealthier and more
powerful than the tobacco, sugar and cotton plantation
owners of the southeast. One rice planter, Joseph
Alston, even became South Carolina governor. Also in the
1800s, pirates sailed our coastline and hid in the
Inlet's winding creeks, waiting to plunder England-bound
ships.
People who summered in Murrells Inlet in the 1800s
generally traveled to Conway or Georgetown by train,
then picked up a steamboat that docked at the Wachesaw
river landing. A horse and buggy or oxen cart carried
travelers and their belongings to their cottages. The
river steamboats were known for serving excellent food.
Many of the steamboats' cooks settled in Murrells Inlet
and opened their own restaurants, giving the area a
reputation for savory cuisine long ago.
The Civil War came to Murrells Inlet's shores in 1863.
Union warships attacked the Confederacy's
blockade-runners that used the Inlet as a port to sneak
cotton and other products to England in exchange for war
materials, food and medicine. The war caused the decline
of the rice culture. Though some rice plantations
partially recovered, they could not survive the
devastating hurricanes that followed. By 1916 the last
remaining commercial rice grower was out of business.
By then, commercial fishing was a popular industry with
catches shipped north on schooners. Recreational fishing
also became part of the landscape. In 1914, captain-led
fishing excursions out of the Inlet on 20-foot skiffs
cost $5 per person for a day trip.
At the height of the Great Depression, Murrells Inlet's
economy was spurred when Archer Milton Huntington from
New York, spent millions of dollars to develop his
9,000-acre homestead and gardens. He hired local brick
masons, painters, landscapers, carpenters and other
craftsmen to create his dream of a Spanish castle. He
even built a church, medical clinic and community center
for the residents of Sandy Island, an island community
between the Pee Dee and Waccamaw rivers. The Huntington
home, Atalaya, was built with 22 fireplaces and 36
rooms, one of which was an oyster-shucking room. In
their outdoor statuary gardens, his wife, Anna Hyatt
Huntington, displayed her sculpting work, for which she
was known nationwide. Theirs was a private estate until
Mr. Huntington's death in 1955. Today, Atalaya is part
of Huntington Beach State Park and their garden, now
Brookgreen Gardens, is the largest showcase of American
figurative sculpture in the country, displaying 68 of
Mrs. Huntington's pieces, including the Fighting
Stallions at the entrance.
More restaurants, marinas and private homes have emerged
in the Murrells Inlet South Carolina village, but
residents are not quick to forget what drew them here in
the first place. Front-porch tales, ghost stories and a
variety of local tours keep alive the history so deeply
rooted in our marsh creeks, sandy banks and river
landings. Names of local streets and neighborhoods are
reminiscent of the people, plantations and cottages of
yesteryear: Hermitage, Sunnyside, Vaux Hall and Wachesaw
are but a few of the nostalgic familiarities that make
Murrells Inlet the quaint seaside community it is today.
Source:
Murrells Inlet SC |
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