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Oconee Station State Historic Site. / 34.84611°N 83.07056°W / 34.84611; -83.07056. Oconee Station was established in 1792 as a blockhouse on the South Carolina frontier. Troops were removed in 1799. The site also encompasses the Williams Richards House, which was built in the early 19th century as a residence and trading post. [2]
Oconee (Cherokee: ᎤᏊᏄ, romanized: Uquunu) town developed on the Cherokee trading path near present-day Oconee Station State Historic Site along Oconee Creek. The town was located along the Cherokee trading path of the early 18th century between the English colonial Atlantic port of Charleston and the Mississippi River to the west.
June 16, 2004. Oconee State Park is a state park located in the Blue Ridge Mountain region of South Carolina. This 1165-acre (472 ha) park has several recreational opportunities to choose from. They include cabins, camping, fishing and boating in the two small lakes located on the park grounds, hiking on eight nature/hiking trails, and several ...
Oconee Station State Historic Site can be found in Walhalla at 500 Oconee Station Road and is the final destination on the list. This locale was once a military compound and trading post; whereas ...
Old Pickens Presbyterian Church. Old Pickens Presbyterian Church. April 4, 1996. ( #96000380) South Carolina Highway 183, 0.25 miles (0.40 km) west of the Oconee-Pickens county line. 34°47′29″N 82°53′12″W. / 34.791389°N 82.886667°W / 34.791389; -82.886667 ( Old Pickens Presbyterian Church) Seneca.
38 State Parks. 8 State Historic Sites. 1 State Resort Park. 1 State Recreational Area. Cheraw State Park was the first park to be proposed within the system in 1934 with Myrtle Beach State Park becoming the first park to open in 1936. [3] Within six years, the State of South Carolina and the CCC opened 17 state parks. [4]
This is a 3.73-mile (6.0 km) section of the trail in Oconee County. It descends about 1,000 feet (300 m) from Oconee State Park to County Highway 95. It passes near Station Cove Falls. There is a hiker-only spur trail to the falls. At the terminus of the Oconee passage, there is a short spur trail to the Oconee Station State Historic Site. At ...
Station Cove Falls, near Walhalla, South Carolina, is a 60 ft (18 m) high cascade waterfall in the Andrew Pickens Ranger District of the Sumter National Forest, near Oconee Station State Historic Site. [1] The falls is reached by an easy 3/4 mile hike with one stream crossing through a canopy of mature basswood, buckeye, and American beech.