Inscription
(Front) This African-American community was established in 1930 after two floods on the Savannah River washed away most of the town of Hamburg. That town had become a predominantly African-American community after the Civil War. Carrsville was most likely named for Charles W. Carr of the American Red Cross or for William Carpenter, an AfricanAmerican businessman, both of whom gave lots for new homes here to families displaced by the flooding.
(Reverse) Boylan Street here was originally named Red Cross Street in recognition of that organization’s aid to the black families who had lost their homes on the banks of the Savannah River. This building, long called “the Society Building,” was built in 1930 for the Young Men’s Union Society, which later bought the lot from William Carpenter.
The building has hosted many events for organizations such as Simmons Lodge No. 571, which acquired it in 1988. Sponsored by the Heritage Council of North Augusta, 2014
Location
Sources
More markers in Aiken
The S.c. Railroad
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* Proposed location.
Western Terminus South Carolina Railroad
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Near the foot of this bluff in the old town of Hamburg stood the western terminus of the S.C. Canal and Rail Road Co. Begun in 1830, it...
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Situated between this point and the Savannah River, Hamburg was a thriving river port and trading center for cotton and tobacco.
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This church was built in 1836 by Beech Island Presbyterian Church, organized in 1827 with the Rev. Nathan H. Hoyt of Vermont as first...
James U. Jackson Memorial Bridge/James U. Jackson (1856-1925)
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JAMES U. JACKSON MEMORIAL BRIDGE (Front) The first North Augusta bridge was built in 1891 by James U. Jackson.
