Inscription
(Front) Joseph Joyner owned a private ferry on the Congaree River near this site by 1749. John McCord’s private ferry succeeded Joyner’s by 1757, becoming public in 1766 by statute. A route from Charleston to Camden crossed the river at McCord’s Ferry. Due to its strategic location, the ferry figured in actions on the south side of the river during the Revolutionary War.
(Reverse) As the river cut a new channel, isolating the oxbow lake now called Bates Old River, a second ferry was chartered in 1845. This ferry was operated by the Bates family from the Civil War until bridges replaced both crossings in the 1920s. U.S. Hwy. 601 crosses the old river west of the McCord’s Ferry site and the Congaree River two miles downriver from the former Bates Ferry site.
Sponsored by Richland County Conservation Commission, 2014
Location
Sources
More markers in Richland
Trinity Episcopal Church
Columbia, SC
Parish organized 1812.
Site of Parade Ground
Columbia, SC
During Federal military occupation of South Carolina 1865-1877, this square was part of the parade ground used by United States troops.
“commissioners’ Oak”
Columbia, SC
In April 1786, Alexander Gillon, Henry Pendleton, Richard Winn, Richard Hampton, and Thomas Taylor, Commissioners appointed to lay out...
“chestnut Cottage”
Columbia, SC
* Replaced a marker erected in 1938 by the Columbia Sesquicentenial Commission of 1936.
Original Site of Winthrop College
Columbia, SC
In 1886, chiefly through the efforts of D. B. Johnson, first superintendent of Columbia public schools, Winthrop Training School, later...
