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A Guidebook to South Carolina Historical Markers

Title
A Guidebook to South Carolina Historical Markers / compiled by Edwin Breeden.
ISBN
9781643361574
9781643361550
9781643361567
Publication
Columbia, South Carolina : The University of South Carolina Press, [2021]
Manufacture
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2021
Copyright Notice Date
©[2021]
Physical Description
1 online resource (448 pages).
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Includes index.
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
"The official state marker program dates to the 1930s, though sporadic efforts existed even earlier (and those early markers are also included in the text). The program, however, was formalized in 1936 when the Historical Commission created the Historical Markers Survey, the first systematic state effort to mark South Carolina's historically significant places, and the forebear to today's S.C. Historical Marker Program. The survey's creation came amid a wider movement to mark places of historical significance, spurred partly by the rise of the automobile and desires to boost local commerce and tourism. Beginning in the 1920s and continuing after World War II, states across the country began erecting historical markers along well-traveled highways, hoping to entice drivers to stray from their planned route, educating themselves on the area's past and contributing economically to its present. As elsewhere, South Carolina's markers were often placed in the right-of-way and erected in coordination with the State Highway Department, now the South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT). Many aspects of this early program-some of them later abandoned-were modeled on Virginia's successful marker program, established in 1927 as one of the first in the country. This volume offers comprehensive coverage of every marker approved by the South Carolina Marker Program from its inception until the present day, more than 1,700 marker texts in total. All marker texts are recorded faithfully, as they appear on the marker itself, including occasional oddities of punctuation and style necessitated by the space constraints of the marker form. The guidebook includes subject indices for Colonial History, the American Revolution, the Civil War, Reconstruction, World Wars I and II, African Americans, Native Americans, Women, Agriculture, and Industry. Markers stand at sites that are well-known and those that are nearly forgotten, if not for the silent cast iron sentinel that tells the stories of the people and events that once inhabited the place. One of the remarkable trends that the program has undergone over the years is that it has become more inclusive in the topics it covers. Older markers, though hardly homogenous, nonetheless disproportionately reflected those facets and interpretations of the past that most appealed to white South Carolinians. Decades passed before markers began to acknowledge places for their important associations with African Americans, a group of people who collectively represented a majority of the state's population until the 1920s and who continue to represent a significant portion of South Carolina's citizenry. That gap, while by no means closed, has greatly narrowed in recent years, to the point that roughly half of the new markers approved annually focus on African American history. As a collection, the markers record not only the history of the state, but also the stories that South Carolinians have told about themselves over the years"-- Provided by publisher.
Variant and related titles
Project MUSE complete collection 2021.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
July 17, 2023
Genre/Form
Local history.
Guidebooks.
Also listed under
South Carolina. Historical Marker Program.
Project Muse. distributor
Citation

Available from:

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