Well, that's sad. It's been three years since I posted in here. I'm still spending too much time working on things and not enough playing with them. I did finish the rest of the South Carolina Adventure Route, but I'm pretty sure I did it wrong. I was concentrating on finishing it instead of experiencing it. Not enough pictures taken. Not enough stops made. Just get to the end and mark it complete.
This weekend, I went back and ran parts of it again with my sons and grandkids. So, 7 people ranging from 56 to 8.
Our weekend started Friday night at Mill Creek Campground in Pineville, SC. It is an equestrian campground run by Sumpter County. It has close to 100 sites as well as stables for horses. We rolled in fairly late, threw up a couple of tents, ate brats with onions and peppers wrapped in pitas, and crashed for the night. No pictures. There really wasn't much to see.
The next morning we were up at 6:30, ate breakfast, and loaded up. We were gone before the camp host came around to collect the $5 camping fees so we tucked it in their door and hit the road. We came out of the campground and made a right to dive into the Manchester State Forest. 28000 acres of forest set up for multiuse with horse trails, OHV trails, hiking trails, and dirt roads.
This time I was determined to stop and smell the roses. To actually see what there is to see instead of blasting past every sign or sight. It wasn't long before we found a little sign on the side of the road for the Elizabeth Cemetary. Tucked down a fairly narrow track was this.
The oldest stone we found was dated 1881. It looked to be hand-carved and didn't have a name. A little internet digging found this image of the same stone. You can almost make out the name on it but time has erased most of it.
From there we headed on down the road.
The next stop was what looked to be an old house site with a huge stone chimney. At a guess, the house had fallen or burned a long time ago.
South Carolina is littered with little churches. This one is in the middle of the state forest and was founded back in the mid-1800s. This one has been rebuilt at some point and looks to still be in use.
The crew.
The vehicles. My son bought my XJ from me so it stayed in the family. I will say the H3T is pretty awesome off-road.
The railroad to nowhere.
The other thing South Carolina is littered with is old plantation houses. Some of them date back to slave times, some were burned when Sherman made his march through the state during the Civil War. Not all of the plantation houses are huge mansions like the movies depict. Many of them are just wooden farmhouses with fancy porches.
This one was saved from burning because the Feds used it as a field hospital and headquarters instead of burning it.
As we move north from Sumpter County, paralleling the Wateree River, into Kershaw County we come across another historical marker. This one has a dog statue beside it. Have you ever wondered where the breed Boykin Spaniel came from? Well, now you know.
Back in a second...