Inscription
Richland County's second court house was built in 1803-04 on the northeast corner of Richardson (Main) and Washington Streets. In the 1850s, it was razed and a new court house erected on the same site. On the southeast corner was located the Athenaeum, incorporated in 1856, which contained a lecture and exhibit hall and a library.
The Athenaeum and the new court house were both burned by Union troops in 1865. Erected by Columbia Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, 1970
Location
Sources
More markers in Richland
Trinity Episcopal Church
Columbia, SC
Parish organized 1812.
Site of Parade Ground
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During Federal military occupation of South Carolina 1865-1877, this square was part of the parade ground used by United States troops.
“commissioners’ Oak”
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In April 1786, Alexander Gillon, Henry Pendleton, Richard Winn, Richard Hampton, and Thomas Taylor, Commissioners appointed to lay out...
“chestnut Cottage”
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* 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...
