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Features Christopher Orr's Tavern (c. 1835) and five nineteenth-century homes. ... [more] |
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Includes Anderson College (1911) and two early twentieth-century homes ... [more] |
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A plaque on Church Street in Anderson commemorates Anderson's former Church Street Business District. Restaurants, tailors, barber shops, cab companies, funeral homes, hotels, doctor and dentist of... [more] |
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Highlights include the second Anderson County Courthouse (c. 1898), the Anderson City Hall (1898), the Sullivan Hardware Store (1891), Anderson National Bank (1872), two early twentieth century tra... [more] |
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This 1890s mill town is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It serves as an example of a self-contained mill community. ... [more] |
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The town of Pendleton was founded in 1790 as the seat of government for the Old Pendleton District, which includes present day Anderson, Oconee, and Pickens counties. The entire town of Pendl... [more] |
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Downtown district with 18 contributing turn of the twentieth century structures. ... [more] |
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Residential district that includes twenty-five contributing properties, bounded by Fairplay Street, Oak Street, Poplar Street, South First Street, Second Street and South Third Street. ... [more] |
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Includes Little Arlington (1883), the Victorian Von-Hassein-Cathcart House (c. 1892), and the Cochran-Bolt-Coffee House (c. 1898). ... [more] |
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