Recreation and Places of Interest
South Carolina offers tourists
and residents a great variety of year-round recreational
activities. The scenic mountainous section in
the northwest affords good camping and hiking
in wilderness areas, and water sports are the
major attraction at the many fine resorts that
line the state’s coast. Inland swamps and
coastal areas abound in wildlife, and fish are
abundant in both saltwater and freshwater regions.
In addition, thousands of tourists visit the
state’s numerous places of historic interest.
National Parks
Seven units of the National
Park System are located in South Carolina. In
Fort Sumter National Monument is Fort Sumter,
where the opening engagement of the American
Civil War was fought in April 1861. Cowpens National
Battlefield commemorates the Battle of Cowpens,
which ended British control in South Carolina
during the American Revolution. Kings Mountain
National Military Park preserves the site of
an earlier important battle of the revolution,
the Battle of Kings Mountain. The Ninety Six
National Historic Site preserves a colonial trading
village and seat of government. Fort Moultrie
National Monument preserves the site where a
squadron of British warships was repelled during
the revolution; the fort was also among those
bombarding Fort Sumter at the outset of the Civil
War. Charles Pinckney National Historic Site
preserves the simple 18th-century farm of a delegate
to the Constitutional Convention. The last significant
tract of virgin bottomland hardwoods in the southeastern
United States is contained in the Congaree Swamp
National Monument.
National and State Forests
The federal government maintains
two national forests in South Carolina. Sumter
National Forest, the larger one, includes foothills
and mountains in three separate sections in the
northwestern part of the state. Francis Marion
National Forest in southeastern South Carolina
is named after the Revolutionary War general
also known as “The Swamp Fox”
for his campaigns in the region. The state forests
in South Carolina include Sand Hills State Forest,
the largest, which adjoins the Carolina Sandhills
National Wildlife Refuge, one of 11 in the state.
State Parks
Cheraw State Park, in the Sandhills
country of the northeast, is the oldest in the
system and contains a championship golf course.
Table Rock State Park, which lies in the Blue
Ridge province, is a scenic area that includes
Table Rock and other peaks, and dense forests.
Nearby, also in a mountainous area, is Oconee
State Park, which includes a lake. Poinsett State
Park, in central South Carolina, contains many
wooded trails. In Myrtle Beach State Park, on
the northeastern coast, are found a wide, sandy
beach, sand dunes, and forests. Off the southeastern
coast is Hunting Island State Park, located on
a barrier island.
Several units of the state park
system are primarily of historic interest. General
Thomas Sumter Historical Site, in Stateburg,
includes the grave of Thomas Sumter, an American
Revolutionary leader. Old Dorchester, near Summerville,
is a historical state park on the site of the
old town of Dorchester, which was settled in
1696 by colonists from Massachusetts. The settlement
was abandoned after the Revolutionary War, and
the site includes its ruins. In Lancaster is
the Andrew Jackson Historical State Park, in
the region in which the seventh United States
president was born. Rivers Bridge State Park
marks the site of a Civil War engagement.
Museums
Museums noted for fine arts
collections include the Gibbes Museum of Art
of the Carolina Art Association, in Charleston;
the Columbia Museum of Art, in Columbia; the
Florence Museum of Art, Science and History,
in Florence; and the Greenville County Museum
of Art, in Greenville. The South Carolina State
Museum in Columbia has a collection of works
by South Carolina artists but also includes extensive
exhibits on science and history. The Charleston
Museum houses a fine collection of South Carolina
memorabilia. Other historical materials are housed
in the South Carolina Confederate Relic Room
and Museum in Columbia, Clemson University’s
Hanover House, the McKissick Museum at the University
of South Carolina with its collection of folk
art, and the Museum of African-American Culture
in the Mann-Simons Cottage in Columbia. The Citadel
operates a military museum in Charleston.
Other Places to Visit
Popular tourist attractions
in South Carolina are the state’s famous
gardens. In the Charleston area are Magnolia
Gardens, which are on a 17th-century plantation
and are especially noted for displays of azaleas,
magnolias, and camellias; Middleton Gardens,
which date from the 1740s and are the oldest
formal landscaped gardens in the United States;
and Cypress Gardens, which contain a lake where
bald cypress trees grow. Other notable gardens
include Edisto Gardens in Orangeburg, Kalmia
Gardens in Hartsville, and Swan Lake in Sumter.
In Brookgreen Gardens, near Marrells Inlet, more
than 500 sculptures are displayed in a setting
of native trees. The Botanical Garden complements
a zoological park at Riverbanks, in Columbia.
There are numerous historic
places of interest in the state, many of them
in Charleston. The Heyward-Washington House,
which dates from about 1770, was the home of
Thomas Heyward, a signer of the Declaration of
Independence. Among the many other historic landmarks
in Charleston are the Old Powder Magazine, which
was built about 1713; the Old Exchange, which
dates from 1771; Saint Michael’s Episcopal
Church, which was begun in 1752; and Saint Philip’s
Episcopal Church, which was completed in 1838.
Columbia has a number of historic sites, including
the Robert Mills House (1823), and the boyhood
home (1872) of Woodrow Wilson, commemorating
the 28th United States president. Clemson, a
town in northwestern South Carolina, is the site
of Fort Hill, which dates from 1803. It was the
home of the American statesman John C. Calhoun.
The Beaufort Historic District includes more
than 170 buildings.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia