Historical Marker

Kalmia

CORNER OF GREGG AVE. & RICHLAND AVE., AIKEN · Aiken · Aiken

South Carolina marker

Inscription

(Front) This is the site of Kalmia, the home and plantation of William Gregg (1800-1867), pioneer industrialist of the antebellum South. A native of Va., Gregg moved to S.C. in the 1820s, becoming a craftsman and merchant in Columbia and Charleston. In 1837 he invested in the textile mill at Vaucluse, 4 mi.

NW. In 1845 he founded the Graniteville Manufacturing Co. Gregg moved here from Charleston to supervise construction of the mill and mill village 3 mi. W. (Reverse) In 1847 or 1848 Gregg built a Greek Revival house overlooking the Horse Creek Valley and named it Kalmia for the mountain laurel growing here.

A summer home at first, it was his year-round home by 1854 and he died here in 1867. It was built of black cypress, contained 17 rooms, and was lit by gaslights. An ornamental garden featured roses, and a vast peach orchard was among the first in S.C. to ship peaches to Northern markets. Kalmia burned in 1921.

Sponsored by the Aiken County Historical Society, 2014

Location

AddressCORNER OF GREGG AVE. & RICHLAND AVE., AIKEN
CityAiken
CountyAiken

Sources


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