Inscription
(Front) Hitchcock Woods, one of the largest urban forests in the United States, is an area consolidated between 1891 and 1898 by Celestine Eustis (d. 1921), Thomas Hitchcock (18601941), and William C. Whitney (1841-1904). Described as “the greatest equine playground in America,” this tract of more than 8,000 acres was used for steeplechases, fox hunts, and other equestrian recreation by the wealthy Northerners who belonged to the “Aiken Winter Colony.
” (Reverse) The tract, now comprising almost 2,000 acres, has been owned and managed by the Hitchcock Foundation since 1939, when Thomas Hitchcock and his daughter Helen Clark established the foundation. Landmarks include Memorial Gate; Cathedral Aisle, a portion of the railroad bed built by the S.C. Rail Road in 1833-34; and Sand River, an unusual natural formation.
Annual events include the Aiken Horse Show each April and the “Blessing of the Hounds” each November. Erected by the Aiken County Historical Society, 2005
Location
Sources
More markers in Aiken
The S.c. Railroad
Aiken, SC
* Proposed location.
Western Terminus South Carolina Railroad
North Augusta, SC
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...
Hamburg
North Augusta, SC
Situated between this point and the Savannah River, Hamburg was a thriving river port and trading center for cotton and tobacco.
Historic Church
ABOUT 2 MILES BELOW BEECH ISLAND, SC
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)
North Augusta, SC
JAMES U. JACKSON MEMORIAL BRIDGE (Front) The first North Augusta bridge was built in 1891 by James U. Jackson.
