South Carolina Facts and Trivia

Fun Facts about South Carolina State’s Geography

  • South Carolina map outline
  • The walls of the American fort on Sullivan Island, in Charleston Harbor, were made of spongy Palmetto logs. This was helpful in protecting the fort because the British cannonballs bounced off the logs.
  • The City of Myrtle Beach is in the center of the Grand Strand, a 60-mile crescent of beach on the South Carolina coast. In the last 25 years, Myrtle Beach has developed into the premier resort destination on the East Coast.
  • South Carolina is the nation’s leading peach producer and shipper east of the Mississippi River.
  • Before being known as the Palmetto State, South Carolina was known as, and had emblazoned on their license plates, the Iodine State.
  • City Guide: Visit South Carolina City Guide for a look at geography, local history, architecture, and culture.
  • The Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame features champion thoroughbred flat racers and steeplechase horses trained in Aiken.
  • The Black River Swamp Preserve is located near Andrews. This slow-moving river is characterized by high concentrations of organic carbon, which accounts for the tea-colored water and gives rise to the diverse habitats in its widespread floodplain.
  • Batesburg-Leesville is home to the annual South Carolina Poultry Festival held in early May.
  • South Carolina’s smallest county is McCormick at 360 square miles while the largest county is Horry at 1,134 square miles
  • A noble Catawba Indian who befriended early Camden settlers, King Haiglar is often called “The Patron Saint of Camden.” Today, he reigns over Camden in the form of a life-sized weather vane which graces the tower of what once was the circa-1886 Opera House.
  • Chapin is known as the Capital of Lake Murray.
  • Blue Ridge Mountains, Pinnacle Mountain and Sassafras Mountain as part of Appalachian Mountain Range (among others) exist in the state of South Carolina
  • Sumter has the largest Gingko farm in the world.
  • Stretching 60 miles from Little River to Georgetown, South Carolina’s Grand Strand is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the United States.
  • The Edisto River Canoe & Kayak Trail covers 66 miles of the river for which it’s named. The Edisto is reputed to be the world’s longest free-flowing “blackwater” stream. “Blackwater” is a term that not only describes the color of the tannin-rich water, but also refers to the peaceful rate of flow that characterizes such rivers.
  • A 24-mile motorcycle trail and a 26-mile horse trail are unusual features of Parsons Mountain Park in the Sumter National Forest.
  • The Lake City tobacco market was established in 1898, and has grown to become one of the two largest markets in South Carolina today.
  • The Upper Whitewater Falls is the highest cascade in eastern America; it descends for nearly 411 feet.

South Carolina State Symbols Trivia

  • South Carolina State Bird is called the Carolina Wren
  • The official state flower of South Carolina is Yellow Jessamine
  • Sabal Palm is the official state tree of South Carolina
  • The official state motto of South Carolina is ‘Dum spiro spero’ which translates to ‘While I breathe, I hope’
  • South Carolina entered the Union on May 23, 1788 and became the 8th state.
  •  The current South Carolina state flag was officially adopted on January 26, 1861.
  • Adopted in 1776, the Great Seal of South Carolina features two elliptical sections linked together by the branches of a palmetto tree.
  • The state dance of South Carolina is the Shag!
  • The official song of the state of South Carolina is called ‘Carolina’
  • The Isle of Palms was originally named Hunting Island and then Long Island, it’s thought to be at least 25,000 years old, and was first inhabited by the indigenous Seewee Indians.
  • “Palmetto State” refers to the South Carolina official state nickname
  • Johnston is called The Hub of the Ridge because it is located at the meeting place of the three river systems which flow away from the Ridge, a fertile plateau about thirty miles long between clay hills to the north and sand hills to the south.
  • Johnston is known as the Peach Capital of the World.

Historical Facts about the State of South Carolina

  • Campbell’s Covered Bridge built in 1909, is the only remaining covered bridge in South Carolina. Off Hwy 14 near Gowensville.
  • SC is the Two-letter or Postal Abbreviation and S.C. is the Traditional or Standard Abbreviation for the State of South Carolina.
  • The salamander was given the honor of official state amphibian
  • David Robert Coker (1870-1938) conducted his early crop-improvement experiments on the family plantation in Hartsville. Beginning with 30 experimental cotton selections and methodically applying the latest techniques in the scientific breeding of crops, the work of Coker Experimental Farms played a great role in the agricultural revolution in the South.
  • The first battle of the Civil War took place at Fort Sumter.
  • The only major league baseball player to wear the name of his hometown on his uniform was pitcher Bill Voiselle. He wore number 96. 
  • Find out the interesting facts about the famous people born in South Carolina
  • The Stumphouse Mountain Tunnel was started in 1856 by a railroad company and is bored for more than a mile into the granite heart of fabled Stumphouse Mountain. The coming of the Civil War in 1859 ended the work on the project. Some years ago, Clemson University made Blue Mold Cheese in the tunnel successfully for the first time in the South.
  • South Carolina quarter was issued on May 22, 2000.
  • Tyler Brothers Work Shoe and Boot Company in Wagener produces 8 major brands of OSHA approved safety footwear, including such famous brands as Redwing, Georgia, Northlake, and Wolverine.
  • The Board of Public Works in Gaffney built an elevated water storage tank in the shape of a peach in 1981.
  • The Argent train Engine No. 7 was donated to the town of Hardeeville upon the closing of the Argent Lumber Company. This narrow gauge train is a rarity and attracts many people from across the nation.
  • The first boll weevil found in South Carolina is on display at the Pendleton District Agricultural Museum.
  • Duncan Park Baseball Stadium in Spartanburg is the oldest minor league stadium in the nation.
  • Every few years, Irmo has a sighting of some kind of water monster that inhabits Lake Murray. The monster first ‘surfaced’ in 1973 when residents of Irmo and Ballentine saw a cousin of the Loch Ness Monster. It was described in The Independent News in 1980 as “a cross between a snake and something prehistoric.”
  • Sweetgrass basket making has been a part of the Mount Pleasant community for more than 300 years. Basket making is a traditional art form that has been passed on from generation to generation.
  • Bomb Island on Lake Murray each spring and summer is the home of a very unusual event. Each year thousands of Purple Martins return to this island to roost for the summer. The island has been declared a bird sanctuary and it is quite a sight to watch these birds return to Bomb Island each day around sunset.
  • At the Riverbanks Zoological Park in Columbia more than 2000 animals thrive in recreated natural habitats with no bars or cages.
  • Little River is the Gateway to the Grand Strand. Giant moss-covered oak trees, that are centuries old, line its waterfront and many streets!
  • There is an old saying in Marion that anyone who drinks water from Catfish Creek becomes infatuated with the area and wishes to remain there.
  • In February 1852 William Burkhalter Dorn discovered the second richest vein of gold in SC history on the site of the present town of McCormick.
  • Red Spider Lilies were first planted in the US, in the Willington-Mt. Carmel area when Dr. James Morrow sent them and other plants from the Orient while he served as surgeon with Commodore Perry’s expedition to open trade with Japan.
  • The introduction of tobacco in 1894 rocketed Mullins into the Tobacco Capital of South Carolina. As many as 200 tobacco barns sprang up throughout the community. Warehouses were also constructed and the first tobacco sale took place on August 28, 1895.
  • Housed in a 100-year-old freight depot, the Cowpens museum is a showplace for relics belonging to the crew of the USS Cowpens, a famous World War II aircraft carrier.
  • Orangeburg is known as the “Garden City” because of its beautiful Edisto Memorial Gardens. The Edisto Memorial Gardens displays past and current award winning roses from the All-American Rose Selections.
  • The Spartanburg Downtown Memorial Airport was the first airport in South Carolina opening in October 1927.
  • Fountain Inn is proud of the town’s most famous native son. Clayton “Peg Leg” Bates lost his leg in a cotton gin accident at the age of 12; he overcame his tragedy to become a famous dancer. His signature step was the “Imitation American Jet Plane,” in which he would jump five feet in the air and land on his peg leg, with his good leg sticking out straight behind him. During his career, Bates performed more than 20 different times on the Ed Sullivan television show more than any other artist.
  • On Nov 2, 1954 Strom Thurmond became the first US senator elected by write-in vote. Thurmond received 139,106 write-in votes to win his seat. He defeated Democratic nominee Edgar Brown, who received only 80,956 votes.
  • Beginning Labor Day and running through the following weekend, the South Carolina Apple Festival celebrates the beginning of apple harvest season in Oconee County, the largest apple-producing area in the state.
  • The Columbia City Ballet, South Carolina’s oldest dance company, has developed into one of the most broadly supported performing arts organizations in the state.

Thanks to: Joyce Myers, Beverly Miller, Diana La Rocque, gaitrie, Randy Cox