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Historic
Ridgeway, South Carolina
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Ridgeway
History
Originally known
as New Town, Ridgeway obtained its present name when the owners of the
Charlotte and South Carolina Railway decided not to build the railroad
on the Camden route, but rather to use the "ridge way." The
railroad spurred growth of the town.
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The
Century House
Confederate
Headquarters Feb.. 17-19 1865
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The
first telegraph line was completed in the Ridgeway area in 1855 with
wires being stretched from tree to tree. The telegraph played an
important role in the civil war as did the town itself
The earliest settlers of the Ridgeway area came south in the late 1700's
from Virginia after the Revolutionary War. Others came north from
Charleston in the early 1800's. |

Constructed 1906
Robert Charleton Thomas |
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The
earliest settlers of the Ridgeway area of lower Fairfield District came
in 1799 and were Scotch-Irish Presbyterians. Among some of the earliest
homes built in Ridgeway were Valencia which was built in the early
1800's by Edward Gendron Palmer who had moved to the area from Saint
James' Parish, Santee, Charleston District. Valley Grove which was built
in the early 1800's by Samuel Peyre Thomas of Saint Stephen's Parish,
Charleston District. Both of these families were plantation owners. |
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Coming
Soon:
The
Ridgeway Story
Ridgeway
Walking Tour
Historic
Ridgeway
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This page
was last updated on
01/25/08.
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