 
        Browse Items (912 total)
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        Busy Johnsonville To Have Newspaper - 1915Discusses the creation of the Johnsonville Progress, a newspaper that ran until at least 1917. No issues of the progress have been found so far. If you know of one please contact the site administrator.
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        Live Body Formed For Johnsonville - 1916Describes the creation of the first Johnsonville Chamber of Commerce.
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        Johnsonville's Early July 4th Celebration, The Winyah Observer 7-8-1849Contains a story about Johnsonville's 4th of July Celebration in 1849.
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        Country Club Enters Final Construction Stage - 1969From the short lived Times of Three Towns newspaper - article discusses the completion of the Wellman Club.
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        Johnsonville Rescue Squad Accepting LHR Machine, 12-29-1977Hilburn Stone and other Johnsonville Rescue Squad members along with Mayor Connie DeCamps accept the new LHR machine for the department. 29 December 1977
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        Baptist Men Paint , 1982Members of Johnsonville First Baptist paint the home of James Franklin "Bubba" Hanna and Lillian Hanna.
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        Ground Breaking for Johnsonville's Dentist Office, 1977Ground breaking for Charlie Maxwell's dentist office.
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        Johnsonville Mayor Connie DeCamps and Girl Scouts, 3-3-1977Mayor Connie DeCamps meets with Girl Scouts. 3 March 1977
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        Reverend Ebenezer Francis Newell, age 71Birth: Aug. 30, 1775
 Brookfield, Worcester County, Mass.
 Death: Mar. 8, 1867
 This is the portrait in Rev Newell's book - Life and Observations of Rev EF Newell. This portrait was painted by WO Bemis, engraved by J Sartain of Philadelphia
 
 He married his first wife, Fannie Butterfield on October 21, 1810. He married his second wife, Polly Blanchard on February 12, 1826.
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        Broadway Street in Johnsonville looking East toward the railroad, early 1960sThis 1960s era photograph depicts several Broadway Street businesses of the time, including Prosser's Department Store and the old Gulf station. The blue pickup was a 1958 or 1959 Chevy that belonged to David Poston. It is parked in front of the hardware store. The car behind it was Mrs Doris Caraway's yellow and white 1958 Ford. The third car was Mr Moss Daniels Ford from the early 1950's. The convertible's owner is unknown.
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        Thomas and Margaret Johnson GrierThomas Rothmahler Grier (1817-1883) and his wife, Margaret Ann Johnson Grier (1823-1891). Thomas was a magistrate and was known as "The Squire." He owned a plantation near Lynches River given by Margaret Johnson's father William J. Johnson, who founded Johnsonville.
 
 The Johnson plantation was a part of the original grant to John James. William Johnson, Sr. had bought a part of the grant from the heirs of John James. He also purchased a portion of the land granted to the Witherspoons. It was part of the Witherspoon grant that was given to Margaret Johnson Grier.
 
 Margaret was the daughter of Captain William J. Johnson (1787-1851) and Sarah Crosby Johnson (1790-1867). Thomas Grier was the son of James Marion Grier (1780-1827) and Elizabeth W Covan (1800-1873).
 
 Elizabeth Covan Grier later married a second time to Thomas Duke. She is buried along side Thomas and Margaret Grier at the Grier Cemetery in Johnsonville.
 
 The children of Thomas and Margaret Johnson Grier are:
 Sarah Grier (1844–1900) m. William Melvin Haselden
 William James Grier (1848–1917) m. Celia Graves Johnson
 Julia Ann Grier (1850–1900) m. Franklin Evander Hanna
 Thomas Mitchell Grier (1854–1877)
 Judith Crosby Grier (1857–1938) m. Zachary Taylor Eaddy
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        Thomas Lynch, Jr.Thomas Lynch, Jr. (August 5, 1749 – 1779) was a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of South Carolina; his father was unable to sign the Declaration of Independence because of illness.
 
 He was born at Prince George Parish, Winyah, in what is now Georgetown, South Carolina, the son of Thomas Lynch and his wife, the sister of Isaac Motte. He was schooled at the Indigo Society School in Georgetown before his parents sent him to England, where he studied at Eton College and at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge.[1] He studied law at the Middle Temple in London, returning to America in 1772.
 
 After his father's death due to a stroke, his widowed mother married South Carolina Governor William Moultrie. Thomas' sister Elizabeth Lynch married James Hamilton; one of their sons was James Hamilton, Jr., who became governor in the state in 1830.
 
 Lynch, Jr. became a company commander in the 1st South Carolina regiment in 1775 and was elected to the Continental Congress. He was taken ill at the end of 1779. He and his wife sailed for respite to St. Eustatius in the West Indies. Their ship disappeared at sea in a storm and was never found. No one ever saw him again.
 
 Before the voyage, Lynch had made a will, stipulating that heirs of his female relatives must change their surname to Lynch in order to inherit the family estate, a rice plantation. The family estate, Hopsewee, still stands in South Carolina.
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        Johnsonville Gin Company, 1962The Johnsonville Gin Company was located by the railroad track in Johnsonville near the corner of Pine Street and Railroad Ave. At the time this photo was taken in 1962, it was run by Ezra Eaddy and his son James (Bozy) Eaddy, farmers from Leo Community. This lot is now a wooded spot, but passers by can still see the old cotton bail press still standing in the trees.
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        The Johnsonville Drug CompanyThis photo was taken in front of the Johnsonville Drug Company, circa 1920. The man pictured is Ashby McElveen, a druggist at the pharmacy - the girl is currently unknown. He was from Lake City. Ashby purchased a Drug Store in Sumter, SC in 1923 and remained there the rest of his life. His brother Robbie McElveen worked for the Farmers and Merchant Bank in Johnsonville and married a local girl named Cornelia Cockfield. They moved to Lake City after marrying in the early 1920's. This photo was provided by Ashby's grandson, Wilson McElveen. You can make out some of the old buildings on Broadway in the background.
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        Rosa Belle Eaddy Woodberry DicksonRosa Belle Eaddy Woodberry Dickson (1869-1953) was the first female mayor in South Carolina history..
 
 She was a role model of the independent female who lived in
 the area of Johnsonville, South Carolina area between 1868 and 1953. She
 was a truly a person of exceptional ability and especially so for the
 time in which she lived. This multi-talented woman chose to be a school
 teacher and thus became another of the Eaddy family to make her most
 valuable contribution in development of the youth of her community.
 
 Rosa Belle Eaddy was a principal, teacher, pianist, music director, and
 reformer at Old Johnsonville. The school was located between Hemingway
 and Johnsonville, South Carolina. She held radical views for her time
 and place and once created an uproar over the use of the community water
 dipper commonly used in the schools of that era. This was a practice
 followed by families at home and difficult to oppose publicly. She had
 each child to furnish his own drinking vessel to counteract the spread of
 water borne diseases. Time has proved her correct and added to the
 respect held for her by those who knew her.
 
 Rosa Belle Eaddy was a strong and forceful woman who was profoundly
 respected in her community and church. She was reported to be a dramatic
 teacher who could leave a lasting impression on here students in the
 public school as well as the Sunday school classes. Among her practical
 skills were those of carpentry used to build her own house and she shoed
 her own horses. She was elected as Mayor of Johnsonville in 1925, becoming
 the first woman mayor in South Carolina. In this office, she readily
 exercised her authority to arrest persons found violating the law.
 
 Rosa Belle Eaddy first married Wattie Gamewell Woodberry with whom she had four sons and one daughter. Two of of her sons graduated from the U. S. Military Academy, and both were inventors of and holders of numerous patents. After the death of her first husband, she married R.B.W. "Willie" Dickson. No children were born to this marriage.
 
 At the age of 85 years, she died in Lynchburg, South Carolina and was
 survived by three of her sons: Brigadier General John Henry Woodberry of
 Greenville, South Carolina; Clarence Oswell Woodberry of Poston, near
 Johnsonville, South Carolina; and Lieutenant Colonel David Lemuel
 Woodberry, I. of St. Petersburg, Virginia.
 
 One brother, John Mallard Eaddy of Spartanburg, South Carolina survived her passing.
 
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        Broadway Street 1968 looking WestBroadway Street, 1968, during a snow. Photo shows Haselden's Grocery, Frederick's Studio, Post Office, Johnsonville Pharmacy, and Turner's IGA.
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        Broadway Street looking East circa 1954Johnsonville, South Carolina - Broadway Street looking to the East.
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        The Chic, 1973The present business was opened by businessmen Billy King and John Taylor as “The Chick Supreme.” Macky DeCamps owns the building. The business is now run by sisters Carolyn Palumbo, Lavonia Olsen and Dixie Evans.
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        Johnsonville Christmas Parade 1950Pictured: Carl Godwin, Hardee Godwin, Randell Godwin
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        Johnsonville Christmas Parade 1950 - Tomlinson's and VentersThis is the first location of Tomlinson's, a department store opened by U. C. Tomlinson which developed into a regional chain with locations in South Carolina and later North Carolina
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        Faye Burris, Miss Johnsonville 1966Johnsonville Christmas Parade
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        Johnsonville Christmas Parade, 1966The train, shown here with a group of 40 and 8 members aboard, is from Winyah Post 1354, Georgetown, Andrews, Hemingway, and Johnsonville
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        Dairy King DrivethruOperated by husband and wife Lenora Venters and Hugh Hearn.
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        Dairy KingOperated by husband and wife Lenora Venters and Hugh Hearn.
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        Evans Brothers and SonsEvans Brothers and Sons was a business located on Broadway Street. It burned in 2007. The owners relocated the business to Railroad Avenue.
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        Evans Brothers building burnsEvans Brothers and Sons was a business located on Broadway Street. It burned in 2007. The owners relocated the business to Railroad Avenue.

















































